OPINION
Appellant, intervenor in a divorce action between her daughter and appellee, appeals from an agreed decree establishing a joint managing conservatorship between her and appellee. The sole issue is whether the trial court erred in failing to honor appellant’s attempted repudiation of the agreement which she voiced prior to the time the judgment was actually signed. We affirm.
The cause was called for trial on August 10, 1987, and a jury panel was seated but discharged at 1:10 p.m. “due to settlement and agreed order.” Appellee, petitioner in the trial court, was called as a witness and established grounds for the divorce. His counsel then stated he would dictate into the record the agreement between petitioner and his counsel, respondent and her counsel, intervenor and her counsel and the attorney ad litem for the minor child. Twelve pages of the court reporter’s transcript consist of an extremely detailed agreement concerning the possessory and visitation rights of the parties, which was read into the record. After the agreement was dictated into the record, appellee (petitioner) stated he understood all the terms and agreed to them. Respondent in the trial court (the mother of the child) was called as a witness and she stated she understood all the terms and asked the court to approve them. Appellant (inter-venor in the trial court) was called as a witness and stated she had reviewed the agreement and asked the court to approve it. After all sides rested, the trial judge stated and entered on his docket the following:
Orders per the record and the decree. Divorce granted. Attorney Marsh ordered to draw the decreed All parties including the litigants and attorney ad litem are ordered to sign same, submit same to the Court on or before August 20, 1987 by 3:00 p.m. o’clock. Jury waived; cross petition and contest withdrawn in open court.
In a letter to the court, received September 21, 1987, appellant advised the court she would not sign the judgment and requested that the agreement be set aside. On October 5, appellant filed a formal motion to repudiate the agreement, requesting the court to set the same aside. She alleged that she was “pressured” into the agreement and that the joint managing conservatorship was not working.
For reasons not revealed by the record, the formal judgment was not signed until October 20, 1987. It, like the agreement dictated in open court, is in great detail and covers some fourteen pages of the transcript.
In her first point of error appellant contends the court erred in signing the judgment because, prior to rendition of the judgment, she repudiated the agreement on which it was based. Both appellant and appellee rely upon this courts’ opinion in
Buffalo Bag Company v. Joachim,
Appellant further cites this court to
Formby’s KOA v. BHP Water Supply Corporation,
In her second point of error appellant argues that the trial court erred in signing the judgment because it added terms which were not agreed to by the parties. Apparently, appellant refers to some incidental orders the trial court pronounced at the conclusion of the hearing that: (1) all parties were prohibited from making disparaging remarks about each other to or in the presence of the child; (2) there would be no drinking of alcoholic beverages or the use of any narcotics in the presence of the child; and (3) that, while the child was in their custody, no party would have a visitor of the opposite sex in the house past 10:00 p.m., unless the visitor was one of the immediate family.
We reject appellant’s contention that the trial judge erred in signing the judgment which contained these provisions in addition to the original agreements. Even if we should find that the court was not authorized to pronounce these prohibitions in the interest of the child, they are merely unenforceable under the provisions of Rule 11, Tex.R.Civ.Proc.
Markham v. Gaitz,
The judgment is affirmed.
