In the
Court of Appeals
Second Appellate District of Texas
at Fort Worth
___________________________
No. 02-17-00466-CV
___________________________
PAMELA SUE KELLER, Appellant
V.
GREGORY A. KELLER, Appellee
On Appeal from the 231st District Court
Tarrant County, Texas
Trial Court No. 231-560230-14
Before Sudderth, C.J.; Pittman and Birdwell, JJ.
Memorandum Opinion by Justice Birdwell
MEMORANDUM OPINION
In one issue, appellant Pamela Sue Keller contends that the trial court erred by
terminating appellee Gregory A. Keller’s obligation to provide spousal maintenance,
as set forth in the parties’ divorce decree. We reverse the trial court’s order
terminating maintenance and remand for further proceedings.
Background Facts
Pamela and Gregory divorced in 2014. In their agreed divorce decree, they
stipulated that Pamela was “eligible for maintenance” under chapter 8 of the Texas
Family Code.1 Accordingly, the trial court ordered Gregory to pay Pamela
1
We note that a spousal-maintenance provision in an agreed divorce decree may
be enforced as a contract outside the confines of chapter 8, and such a provision is
not subject to chapter 8 “merely because it references chapter 8 or states that a spouse
is eligible for spousal maintenance under chapter 8.” Waldrop v. Waldrop, 552 S.W.3d
396, 403 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2018, no pet.) (en banc op. on reh’g); see also Dalton
v. Dalton, 551 S.W.3d 126, 130–31 (Tex. 2018) (explaining the differences between
chapter 8 court-ordered maintenance and court-approved contractual maintenance);
In re L.R.P., No. 05-14-01590-CV, 2016 WL 514174, at *3 (Tex. App.—Dallas Feb. 9,
2016, no pet.) (mem. op.) (stating that the “mere fact a trial court approves a
contractual spousal support agreement and incorporates it into the divorce decree
does not transform the support obligation into court-ordered maintenance subject to
the . . . provisions of chapter 8”); Ammann v. Ammann, No. 03-09-00177-CV, 2010 WL
4260955, at *2 (Tex. App.—Austin Oct. 28, 2010, no pet.) (mem. op.) (“The mere
reference to family code chapter 8 in the divorce decree does not transform the
contractual alimony obligation into a court-ordered maintenance obligation governed
by that chapter.”).
In the trial court, the parties did not present arguments concerning the extent
to which the spousal-maintenance provisions at issue are contractually enforceable.
Rather, the trial court terminated Gregory’s maintenance obligation on the basis of his
argument that the maintenance did not comply with provisions of chapter 8. We hold
below that the trial court could not terminate the obligation on that basis in this
2
as maintenance the sum of one thousand two hundred thirteen dollars
and sixty-eight cents ($1,213.68) per month[,] . . . with the first payment
being due on October 1, 2014, and a like amount being due [the] 1st of
each consecutive month thereafter until the earliest of one of the
following events occurs:
1. death of either [party];
2. remarriage of [Pamela]; or
3. further orders of the Court affecting the spousal
maintenance obligation, including a finding of cohabitation
by [Pamela].
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the amount of spousal
maintenance shall be increased by 2% of [Gregory’s] gross income every
two years, with the first increase due two years from the date of this
decree of divorce. [Gregory] shall provide a copy of his then-current
payroll statement to [Pamela] upon request. [Pamela] shall be authorized
to submit an Amended Employer’s Withholding Order to the Court
after the modification if she desires.
The divorce decree further recited that before the parties had signed the decree,
they had read it
fully and completely, . . . had the opportunity to ask any questions
regarding the same, and fully underst[ood] that the contents of this Final
Decree of Divorce constitute[d] a full and complete resolution of this
case. [The parties] acknowledge[d] that they ha[d] voluntarily affixed
collateral proceeding, but we expressly decline to decide whether the parties’ spousal-
maintenance agreement is subject to chapter 8 or the extent to which the maintenance
provisions in the agreed divorce decree are enforceable by contempt. See Tex. Fam.
Code Ann. § 8.059(a)(2), (a-1) (West Supp. 2018) (stating that a court may enforce by
contempt a contractual maintenance agreement that has been approved by the court
but that the court “may not enforce by contempt any provision of an agreed order for
maintenance that exceeds the amount of periodic support the court could have
ordered under this chapter or for any period of maintenance beyond the period of
maintenance the court could have ordered under this chapter”).
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their signatures to this Final Decree of Divorce, believing this agreement
to be a just and right division of the marital debt and assets.
Almost three years later, in April 2017, Pamela filed a petition for enforcement
of the spousal-maintenance obligation. She alleged that Gregory had refused to
provide his payroll statement upon her request and asked the trial court to hold him in
contempt. She also pleaded that if the trial court found any part of the divorce
decree’s spousal-maintenance provisions to be insufficiently specific to be enforced by
contempt, the court should “enter a clarifying order restating the terms of the . . .
decree . . . in a manner specific enough to allow enforcement.”
Gregory responded by filing a motion for the trial court to find the spousal-
maintenance obligation void. He asserted,
The order sought to be enforced by [Pamela] is incapable of
enforcement and is void,[2] in that it is ambiguous and is not clear and
specific enough in its terms to meet the statutory requirements under
Section [8.054] of the Texas Family Code. The Judgment must set forth
the duration of the maintenance obligation.
The parties were not married more [than] 10 years, nor was there
a finding of domestic violence by the Court. In addition, [i]n the
Judgment, there was no finding by the Court [that Pamela] was disabled
nor that [Pamela] met the necessary eligibility requirements.
Pamela responded to Gregory’s motion. She contended that even if the trial
court did not have statutory authority to award spousal maintenance, the spousal-
maintenance provisions were not void and were, at most, voidable. She also argued
2
On appeal, however, Gregory asserts that the “question is not whether the
spousal support provision in the decree was void or voidable.”
4
that if the provisions were only voidable, they were not subject to a collateral attack
through Gregory’s motion.
The trial court held a hearing. Gregory testified that he married Pamela in 2005
and divorced her in 2014, a period of less than ten years. He also testified that the
decree did not contain a finding that he had committed family violence against Pamela
or that she had a disability and that the decree did not have an ending date for his
spousal-maintenance obligation. He acknowledged, however, that prior to the divorce,
Pamela had been “granted disability [benefits] from Social Security.” He testified that
since the decree, he had paid Pamela more than $43,000 in maintenance, and he asked
the court to terminate that obligation.
Pamela testified that her disability resulted from brain surgery in 2007; she
explained that from “that point forward,” she had problems with memory retention
and with mental and verbal communication. She testified that she was not able to
work because she had “mass memory retention issues” and seizures.
At the end of the hearing, the trial court explained that it would terminate the
maintenance obligation because the law says “that [a finding of disability supporting
the obligation] has to be specific.” The trial court signed an order in which the court
found that the spousal-maintenance obligation was not enforceable and terminated
the obligation because (1) the decree did not set forth the duration of the maintenance
obligation, and (2) the decree did not contain a finding that established Pamela’s
eligibility for maintenance. Pamela brought this appeal.
5
The Trial Court’s Order Terminating Spousal Maintenance
In one issue, Pamela argues that the trial court erred by modifying the divorce
decree to terminate Gregory’s spousal-maintenance obligation. She contends that
Gregory did not prove appropriate grounds for modification of the obligation under
the Texas Family Code and that the trial court’s apparent grounds for terminating the
obligation—that Pamela was never statutorily eligible for a maintenance award and
that the decree failed to set forth the duration of the maintenance obligation—could
not be considered in a collateral attack on the decree.
Chapter 8 of the family code establishes circumstances when a trial court may
order spousal maintenance. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 8.001(1) (West 2006) (defining
“[m]aintenance” as an “award in a suit for dissolution of a marriage of periodic
payments from the future income of one spouse for the support of the other
spouse”), § 8.051 (West Supp. 2018) (describing conditions of eligibility for an award
of spousal maintenance). Section 8.051 states that in a divorce proceeding, a court
may order maintenance if the spouse seeking maintenance lacks sufficient property to
provide for minimum reasonable needs and
(1) the spouse from whom maintenance is requested was convicted of or
received deferred adjudication for a criminal offense that . . . constitutes
an act of family violence . . . .; or
(2) the spouse seeking maintenance:
(A) is unable to earn sufficient income to provide for the
spouse’s minimum reasonable needs because of an
incapacitating physical or mental disability;
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(B) has been married to the other spouse for 10 years or
longer and lacks the ability to earn sufficient income to
provide for the spouse’s minimum reasonable needs; or
(C) is the custodian of a child of the marriage of any age
who requires substantial care and personal supervision
because of a physical or mental disability that prevents the
spouse from earning sufficient income to provide for the
spouse’s minimum reasonable needs.
Id. § 8.051(1)–(2).
A court that orders maintenance under chapter 8 must determine the “nature,
amount, duration, and manner of periodic payments by considering all relevant
factors.” Id. § 8.052 (West Supp. 2018). The family code provides for durational limits
on maintenance obligations depending on the length of the parties’ marriage and on
the obligee’s basis of eligibility for maintenance. Id. § 8.054(a)–(b) (West Supp. 2018).
The family code also limits the amounts of maintenance that a court may order. Id.
§ 8.055 (West Supp. 2018). Finally, the code provides that a court may modify a
maintenance obligation “on a proper showing of a material and substantial change in
circumstances . . . relating to either party or to a child of the marriage.” Id. § 8.057(c)
(West Supp. 2018).
When Gregory asked the trial court to terminate his maintenance obligation, he
argued that (1) the obligation was incapable of enforcement because with regard to
duration of the obligation, the decree was “ambiguous”; and (2) Pamela was not
eligible for maintenance because the trial court did not find in the decree that the
parties were married more than ten years, that he committed family violence against
7
her, or that she was disabled. The trial court relied on these arguments, and no others,
in its order terminating maintenance. Pamela contends in this court, as she did in the
trial court, that these bases for challenging the decree’s maintenance provisions, even
if valid, were required to be raised in a direct appeal from the decree, while the trial
court still had plenary power over the decree, and cannot be raised through a
collateral attack in this proceeding.
Jurisdictional errors in divorce proceedings—errors resulting from a trial
court’s lack of jurisdiction over parties or over subject matter—may render a
judgment void and subject to collateral attack in a separate proceeding. See Tome v.
Tome, No. 02-14-00037-CV, 2014 WL 3953638, at *1 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Aug.
14, 2014, no pet.) (mem. op.) (citing Mapco, Inc. v. Forrest, 795 S.W.2d 700, 703 (Tex.
1990)). But errors in a divorce decree that are not jurisdictional, such as errors
resulting from a court’s action that is contrary to the family code, render a judgment
only voidable and may “be corrected only through a direct appeal.” Id. When a
divorce decree “is not appealed and appears regular on its face, the judgment will not
be subject to a collateral attack in a subsequent suit.” Id.; see Lowery v. Lowery, No. 01-
16-00147-CV, 2017 WL 6520428, at *3 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] Dec. 21,
2017, no pet.) (mem. op.) (“Errors other than lack of jurisdiction over the parties or
the subject matter render the judgment voidable and may be corrected only through a
direct appeal. Res judicata applies to a final divorce decree just as it does to any other
final judgment, barring subsequent collateral attack.” (citation omitted)); Hardin v.
8
Hardin, 597 S.W.2d 347, 350 (Tex. 1980) (“It is well established in Texas that a divorce
judgment, unappealed, and regular on its face, is not subject to a collateral attack in a
subsequent suit.”); see also Segrest v. Segrest, 649 S.W.2d 610, 612 (Tex.) (“A final
judgment settles not only issues actually litigated, but also any issues that could have
been litigated. That the judgment may have been wrong . . . does not affect
application of res judicata.”), cert. denied, 464 U.S. 894 (1983).
In Tome, years after the trial court signed a divorce decree from which the
spousal-maintenance obligor did not appeal, the obligor challenged the obligation on
the basis that the trial court had not had authority to order him to pay $173,200 in
two lump sums, and the trial court signed an order finding that it had not had
jurisdiction to award spousal maintenance under chapter 8. 2014 WL 3953638, at *1.
On appeal, the obligee conceded that the lump-sum obligations were improper but
argued that the trial court lacked authority to render the maintenance obligation void
in a collateral challenge. Id. We held that the maintenance exceeded the “statutory
provisions that governed spousal maintenance” but held that the illegality rendered
the maintenance obligation only voidable and not subject to challenge in a collateral
proceeding. Id. at *2.
In accordance with our decision in Tome, Texas courts have repeatedly held that
a party must raise an argument that a trial court violated the family code in ordering
maintenance in a direct challenge to the divorce decree and not through a collateral
attack. See, e.g., Lowery, 2017 WL 6520428, at *3–5 (holding that because neither party
9
appealed a divorce decree, the decree was not subject to collateral attack on issues
concerning the obligee’s eligibility for maintenance or the duration of the
maintenance); Thompson v. Thompson, No. 05-16-00026-CV, 2017 WL 2871423, at *2
(Tex. App.—Dallas June 30, 2017, no pet.) (mem. op.) (holding that an obligor’s
complaints that maintenance violated family code sections 8.054 and 8.055—which
concern duration and amount of maintenance awards—could not be brought through
a collateral attack). More broadly, Texas courts have also held that other provisions in
final divorce decrees are not subject to collateral attack on arguments that the
provisions were merely unlawful. See, e.g., Shanks v. Treadway, 110 S.W.3d 444, 449
(Tex. 2003) (“George’s remedy for a substantive error of law by the trial court was by
direct appeal, and he cannot now collaterally attack the judgment.”); In re M.M., 357
S.W.3d 841, 843 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2012, no pet.) (holding similarly); Shoberg v.
Shoberg, 830 S.W.2d 149, 152 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1992, no writ) (op. on
reh’g) (explaining that a “judgment based upon erroneous holdings as to substantive
law is not void” and is not subject to collateral attack).
We have not found authority indicating that a divorce decree’s alleged failure to
specify the duration of the maintenance obligation3 or an obligee’s alleged ineligibility
As recited above, the decree stated that Gregory’s maintenance obligation
3
would end on (1) either party’s death, (2) Pamela’s remarriage, or (3) “further orders
of the Court affecting the spousal maintenance obligation, including a finding of
cohabitation by [Pamela].” Although Gregory argued in the trial court and contends in
this court that these terms were ambiguous, and although the trial court so found,
Texas courts, including this court, have held otherwise. See Waldrop, 2018 WL
10
for maintenance at the time of the decree4—the two grounds of Gregory’s motion to
terminate—are jurisdictional errors that may support a challenge to a decree in a
collateral proceeding. Gregory has not directed us to any such authority. Under the
cases cited above, we conclude that these alleged errors are not jurisdictional, do not
render the decree void, and cannot serve as grounds for a challenge to the decree in
this collateral proceeding. See Hardin, 597 S.W.2d at 350; Lowery, 2017 WL 6520428, at
*3–5; Tome, 2014 WL 3953638, at *1. Therefore, we conclude that the trial court erred
by terminating Gregory’s spousal-maintenance obligation on the grounds specified in
the court’s order.5
2728438, at *10; Lowery, 2017 WL 6520428, at *4. Gregory also argues in this court
that the provision of the decree that increases maintenance by 2% of Gregory’s gross
income every two years is ambiguous, but Gregory did not present that argument in
the trial court, and the trial court did not rely on it. Thus, we decline to consider this
argument (along with other arguments briefed on appeal but not raised in the trial
court) as a ground for affirming the trial court’s order. See Victoria Gardens of Frisco v.
Walrath, 257 S.W.3d 284, 290 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2008, pet. denied) (refusing to
affirm a trial court’s order based on a legal theory not presented to the trial court);
Barber Lumber & Mfg. Co. v. Reeves, 40 S.W.2d 248, 249 (Tex. Civ. App.—Beaumont
1931, no writ) (“[A]ppellee is confined to the issues made by his pleadings, and we
cannot affirm the judgment upon a theory . . . not raised by the pleadings.”)
4
The agreed decree recited that “under the circumstances presented in this case,
[Pamela was] eligible for maintenance under the provisions of . . . chapter 8.” Our
sister court in Amarillo has stated that when an obligor agrees to pay maintenance, the
obligor “implicitly represent[s] to the court that [the obligee is] entitled to that
maintenance and . . . is bound by that representation.” Bailey v. Bailey, No. 07-14-
00158-CV, 2016 WL 638058, at *4 n.2 (Tex. App.—Amarillo Feb. 5, 2016, no pet.)
(mem. op.).
We emphasize that the trial court based its termination order on the alleged
5
ambiguity of the duration of the maintenance obligation and on Pamela’s alleged
11
Gregory relies on subsections (c) and (d) of section 8.054 of the family code to
contend that the trial court had authority to review and terminate his maintenance
obligation. Those subsections state that when a trial court has ordered maintenance
on the ground that the obligee had an incapacitating disability or that the obligee was
the custodian of a child with a disability, the trial court may periodically review its
order for maintenance and may modify it. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 8.054(b)–(d); see
also id. § 8.051(2)(A), (C); Hackenjos v. Hackenjos, 204 S.W.3d 906, 909 (Tex. App.—
Dallas 2006, no pet.) (explaining that the “periodic review” available to a court under
section 8.054(c) is a limited exception to section 8.057(c)’s general requirement of a
material and substantial change for modification of a maintenance order). The record
in this case, however, forecloses the possibility that the trial court relied on those
subsections to review and modify the divorce decree because in its termination order,
the trial court expressly found that Pamela was not eligible for maintenance on the
ineligibility for benefits—that is, alleged errors of law in the divorce decree—not on
any authority granted to the court by the “further orders of the Court affecting the
spousal maintenance obligation” language in the decree.
On appeal, Gregory asserts that the trial court did not merely modify the
decree. We agree. And even if we were to broadly construe the trial court’s order as
granting modification of the maintenance obligation under section 8.057 of the family
code on the basis of a “material and substantial change in circumstances,” the
evidence in this case does not prove such a change. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann.
§ 8.057(c). In fact, Gregory conceded that “nothing ha[d] changed” in his
circumstances.
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ground of any disability. Thus, we cannot conclude that provisions within subsection
8.054 support the trial court’s order terminating maintenance.
For all of these reasons, we conclude that the trial court erred by amending the
parties’ final divorce decree through terminating Gregory’s obligation to pay spousal
maintenance. We sustain Pamela’s only issue.
Conclusion
Having sustained Pamela’s sole issue, we reverse the trial court’s “Order on
Motion to Modify Spousal Maintenance or Terminate” and remand this case to the
trial court for further proceedings on Pamela’s “Amended Petition for Enforcement
of Spousal Maintenance.”
/s/ Wade Birdwell
Wade Birdwell
Justice
Delivered: October 4, 2018
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