AFFIRMED and Opinion Filed November 26, 2019
S In The
Court of Appeals
Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
No. 05-18-00201-CV
IN THE INTEREST OF A.R.W., A CHILD
On Appeal from the 417th Judicial District Court
Collin County, Texas
Trial Court Cause No. 417-52158-2016
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Before Justices Whitehill, Partida-Kipness, and Pedersen, III
Opinion by Justice Whitehill
We deny Father’s motion for rehearing. On our own motion, we withdraw our August 20,
2019 memorandum opinion and vacate the judgment of that date. This is now the opinion of the
Court.
This is an appeal from a child-support modification order. Mother and Father are the
divorced parents of one child, Daughter. By court order, Father had primary custody of Daughter,
Mother had expanded standard possession of Daughter, and Father had to pay Mother monthly
child support of $1,360. Father filed a motion to modify seeking an order requiring Mother to pay
him child support under the statutory guidelines. After a bench trial, the trial court found a material
and substantial change in Mother’s circumstances, but it gave Father only partial relief by reducing
his monthly child-support obligation to $700. Father appeals.
The pivotal question is whether the trial court acted arbitrarily, unreasonably, and without
regard to guiding rules and principles by deciding that requiring Father to pay Mother monthly
child support of $700 was in Daughter’s best interest. We conclude that the child-support
guidelines and the evidence support the trial court’s decision, so it was not an abuse of discretion.
Accordingly, we affirm.
After finding that there was a positive material and substantial change in circumstances for
the parent with whom the child lived 20–30% of the time, the trial court ordered the other parent
to continue paying child support so that the child would have “adequate resources” at both parents’
residences. Father complains that this result fundamentally shifts the underlying purpose of child
support from being for the child’s benefit to being for the benefit of the lower-paid parent. We
disagree with that premise because, on this record, the trial court’s decision was within the broad
range of discretion the legislature grants trial courts to grant relief in a child’s best interest.
Here, the trial court determined based on this record that the child’s best interest was served
by ordering a child-support payment that would give her adequate resources at both parents’
residences. This may not be the decision we would have made had we decided the case in the first
instance. But it was not our decision to make. We weren’t there. We didn’t hear the words as
they were spoken, and we didn’t watch the witnesses testify.
The legislature gave trial courts broad discretion as the frontline arbiters of the child’s best
interest to make these judgment calls. On this record, constrained by our limited role as a
reviewing error correction court, we cannot say that the trial court abused its discretion in this case.
We instead recognize, as Father’s rehearing motion concedes, that the Family Code does
not “require that the parent with primary custody automatically be considered the child-support
obligee.” We further recognize that among the infinite number of combinations and permutations
of circumstances in which divorced parents might find themselves, one of them is where the parent
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without primary custody of the child needs financial assistance from the other parent to provide
what a trial court—having absorbed all of the evidence in the first instance—considers to be
adequate living accommodations while the child is living in that parent’s abode. It is not hard to
imagine situations where this result can occur. By granting trial courts discretion to establish
support obligations in the child’s best interest, TEX. FAM. CODE § 154.123(b)(17), the Family Code
gives trial courts the ability to fashion appropriate resource allocations to determine “an equitable
amount of child support” depending on the particular facts and circumstances in those individual
situations, id. § 154.121. Indeed, the Family Code provides that “[t]he court may order either or
both parents to support a child in the manner specified by the order.” Id. § 154.001(a).
Thus, the question is not whether the trial court had the power to require a parent with
whom the child lives most of the time to provide support to the other parent so the child could
have a proper living environment while at the other parent’s house; rather, the issue is whether
there is record evidence from which the trial court could reasonably have done so in this case.
I. BACKGROUND
A. The Original Divorce Decree
Father and Mother married in 2000, and Daughter was born in 2005. Father and Mother
divorced in 2013. Although the divorce decree is not in the appellate record, Father’s brief asserts
that neither party paid child support under that decree. We therefore accept that statement as true.
See TEX. R. APP. P. 38.1(g).
B. The First Modification Order
In October 2015, the trial court (the 367th District Court of Denton County) rendered a
new final order based on Mother’s petition to modify and Father’s counter-petition.1 This order
(i) appointed Father and Mother as Daughter’s joint managing conservators, (ii) gave Father the
1
These pleadings and the order do not appear in the clerk’s record, but the order was admitted into evidence at the trial and so appears in the
reporter’s record.
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right to designate Daughter’s primary residence, (iii) gave Mother possession per an expanded
standard possession order, and (iv) required Father to pay Mother monthly child support of about
$1,360.
The order recited that the court was departing from the statutory child-support guidelines
and stated that “after considering the factors set forth in section 154.123 of the Texas Family Code
it is in the child’s best interest to have an adequate amount of resources available in each home to
support a child.” The court calculated Father’s obligation by subtracting the guideline amount that
Mother would owe as an obligor from the guideline amount that Father would owe as an obligor.
As far as the record reveals, Father did not appeal from that order.
C. The Present Modification Suit
In April 2016, Father filed the present modification suit, which was then transferred from
Denton County to Collin County.
In May 2016, Mother remarried.
Mother later filed a counter-petition to modify in which she sought the exclusive right to
designate Daughter’s primary residence and asked the court to give Father possession “according
to a standard possession schedule with expanded elections.”
In Father’s last amended motion, he (i) alleged that Mother was intentionally
underemployed, (ii) asked the court to order child support in strict compliance with the Family
Code’s guidelines, and (iii) argued that strict compliance would result in Mother’s paying child
support to Father.
In May 2017, the trial court conducted a one-day bench trial. At the trial’s end, the judge
said she would find that Mother’s circumstances had materially changed for the better. At the
judge’s request, the parties filed supplemental briefs on the child-support issue.
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Two months later, the trial judge signed a memorandum order that ordered Father to pay
child support of $700 per month. Father requested findings of fact.
The trial judge later signed findings in support of her memorandum order. She found that
it would be unjust and inappropriate to apply the Family Code § 154.125 guidelines. She also
found that (i) Father’s net monthly resources were $8,827.65, (ii) Mother’s net monthly resources
were $4,550, and (iii) each parent should pay child support based on 20% of the first $8,550 of
that parent’s net resources. Then she offset the awards, reducing Father’s guideline obligation
($1,710) by Mother’s guideline obligation ($910) and by an additional $100 to reflect Father’s
duty to provide Daughter’s health insurance. The judge hand-wrote the following reasons for
deviating from § 154.125:
Providing adequate resources for the child @ both residences; the child support
guidelines amount is being reduced in accordance with Mom’s resources increasing
since the entry of the last order in Denton County and are therefore, offset, but
Court allows by this Order an acknowledgement of the nature of [Mother’s]
community college employment and recent employment of Mom’s evidence at trial
[sic].
A few months later the trial judge signed the final modification order. The order did the
following:
• repeated the court’s previous findings;
• ordered Father to pay child support of $700 per month, again calculated by
taking Father’s guideline support amount ($1,710) and subtracting both
Mother’s guideline support amount ($910) and $100 per month because
Father paid for Daughter’s health insurance;
• maintained both parents as joint managing conservators and maintained
Father’s existing right to designate Daughter’s primary residence; and
• maintained Mother’s existing right to possession consistent with an
expanded standard possession order, except for a minor change to the
parents’ right of first refusal if a parent had to be away from Daughter for
more than two consecutive nights during a possession period.
Father timely appealed.
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II. ISSUES PRESENTED
Although Father’s brief lists four issues presented, the argument section has three distinct
sections. We treat his brief as raising three issues corresponding to those sections, and we
paraphrase those issues as follows:
1. Did the trial court abuse its discretion by rendering an order that ignores the
Family Code and the child’s best interest?
2. Did the trial court abuse its discretion by creating a new “adequate
resources” rule that had no legal basis and risks harmful and inequitable
consequences?
3. Did the trial court err by ordering Father to pay Mother child support when
Mother did not plead for such relief?
III. ANALYSIS
A. Standard of Review
We review a child-support order for abuse of discretion. Iliff v. Iliff, 339 S.W.3d 74, 78
(Tex. 2011). A trial court abuses its discretion if it acts arbitrarily or unreasonably, without
reference to guiding rules or principles. Id. A trial court also abuses its discretion if it fails to
analyze or apply the law correctly. Id.
Legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence are relevant considerations in our abuse of
discretion analysis. In re A.M.W., 313 S.W.3d 887, 890 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2010, no pet.). We
review the evidence in the light most favorable to the order and indulge every presumption in the
order’s favor. Id. “If some probative and substantive evidence supports the order, there is no
abuse of discretion.” Id.
B. Applicable Law
Two fundamental principles operate in the background of every child-support
determination:
First, the paramount guiding principle in child-support decisions should always be the
child’s best interest. Iliff, 339 S.W.3d at 81.
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Second, “[t]he function of child support is to help a custodial parent maintain an adequate
standard of living for the child.” Williams v. Patton, 821 S.W.2d 141, 145 (Tex. 1991) (emphasis
added).
1. Initial Child-Support Determinations
Although this is a modification case, we must place the modification statutes in context by
first discussing the statutory scheme governing initial child-support determinations. That scheme
is found in Family Code Chapter 154.
The trial court can order either or both parents to support their child. FAM. CODE
§ 154.001(a); see also id. § 151.001(3) (every parent has a duty to support his or her child). The
trial court may order a joint managing conservator to pay child support to another joint managing
conservator. Id. § 153.138. In determining the amount of child support, the court cannot consider
a parent’s sex or marital status. Id. § 154.010.
The Code establishes guidelines “to guide the court in determining an equitable amount of
child support.” Id. § 154.121.2 This generally means calculating the child-support obligor’s
monthly “net resources” and applying the statutory guidelines (that is, a specific percentage based
on the number of children) to that amount. See In re P.C.S., 320 S.W.3d 525, 532–33 (Tex. App.—
Dallas 2010, pet. denied); see also FAM. CODE § 154.125. But the court may use the obligor’s
earning potential instead of actual net resources if the obligor earns significantly less than he or
she could earn because of intentional unemployment or underemployment. FAM. CODE
§ 154.066(a). In determining whether an obligor is intentionally unemployed or underemployed,
2
In 1984, Congress required the states to adopt child-support guidelines. The federal Family Support Act of 1988 went further and required
that state guidelines operate as a rebuttable presumption of the proper support amount. See Margaret Campbell Haynes & Susan Friedman Paikin,
“Reconciling” FFCCSOA and UIFSA, 49 FAM. L.Q. 331, 333 n.10 (2015); Linda Henry Elrod, The Federalization of Child Support Guidelines, 6
J. AM. ACAD. MATRIM. LAW. 103, 104 (1990). But the guidelines may vary from state to state. See Charles J. Meyer et al., Child Support
Determinations in High Income Families—A Survey of the Fifty States, 28 J. AM. ACAD. MATRIM. LAW. 483, 485, 488 (2016).
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the court may consider evidence that the obligor is a veteran who is seeking or has been awarded
certain disability benefits. Id. § 154.066(b).
Part of Father’s argument is that Mother is, or should be, the statutory child-support
“obligor” because he has possession of Daughter most of the time. But we find nothing in the
Code saying which parent should be treated as the obligor for guideline purposes, and, as noted
above, the Code authorizes the trial court to order either joint managing conservator to pay child
support to the other. Id. § 153.138.
Father further argues that Mother should be the presumptive obligor because the function
of child support is “to help a custodial parent maintain an adequate standard of living for the child.”
Williams, 821 S.W.2d at 145 (emphasis added). Father’s reliance on that single sentence in
Williams to argue that there can only be a single custodial parent is misplaced. Here, the parents
share custody through a joint managing conservatorship. Williams, in contrast, addressed child-
support arrearages in a sole managing conservatorship. The trial court may order either or both
parents to support a child in the manner specified by the order. FAM. CODE § 154.001(a).
And when a joint managing conservatorship is ordered, the trial court may order one joint
managing conservator to pay child support to the other joint managing conservator. Id. § 153.138;
see also In re E.R.C., 496 S.W.3d 270, 287 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2016, pet. denied) (affirmed
order requiring mother to pay child support to father based on mother’s greater monthly net
resources in joint managing conservatorship in which parents had equal access and possession);
see also Lowe v. Roberts, No. 14-10-01191-CV, 2012 WL 50617, at *2 (Tex. App.—Houston
[14th Dist.] Jan. 10, 2012, no pet.) (mem. op.) (Family Code §§ 153.138 and 153.134(b)(2)
supported modifying parent–child relationship to require father to pay mother child support for
six-month period that child lived with mother under joint managing conservatorship). We find no
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support in the Family Code or Texas case law supporting Father’s premise that only one parent
may be a custodial parent.
The Code establishes presumptions favoring the guideline-determined amount.
Specifically, that amount is presumptively reasonable, and a support order conforming to the
guidelines is presumed to be in the child’s best interest. FAM. CODE § 154.122(a). However, the
court may depart from the guidelines “if the evidence rebuts the presumption that application of
the guidelines is in the best interest of the child and justifies a variance from the guidelines.” Id.
§ 154.123(a). To that end, § 154.123(b) supplies a lengthy list of nonexclusive factors that the
trial court “shall consider” when determining whether applying the guidelines would be unjust or
inappropriate under the circumstances. Id. § 154.123(b)(1)–(17).
If the trial court departs from the guidelines, Chapter 154 generally requires the court to
make specific findings about the parties’ net resources, the percentage the court is applying to the
obligor’s net resources, and the reasons for the departure. Id. § 154.130(a)(3), (b).
2. Modification Proceedings
Modification proceedings are governed by Family Code Chapter 156, and the provisions
specific to child-support modification are found in Subchapter E, id. §§ 156.401–.409.
Per Chapter 156, a court with exclusive, continuing jurisdiction may modify a child-
support order under certain circumstances, such as when the circumstances of the child or another
person affected by the child-support order have materially and substantially changed since the
order was rendered. Id. §§ 156.001, 156.401(a)(1)(A).
Further, concerning child-support modifications, under § 156.402:
(a) The court may consider the child support guidelines for single and multiple
families under Chapter 154 to determine whether there has been a material
or substantial change of circumstances under this chapter that warrants a
modification of an existing child support order if the modification is in the
best interest of the child.
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(b) If the amount of support contained in the order does not substantially
conform with the guidelines for single and multiple families under Chapter
154, the court may modify the order to substantially conform with the
guidelines if the modification is in the best interest of the child. A court
may consider other relevant evidence in addition to the factors listed in the
guidelines.
Id. § 156.402.
Subsections (a) and (b) are somewhat contradictory in that subsection (a) makes it merely
permissive for the trial court in a modification case to consider the Chapter 154 guidelines when
deciding whether there has been a material and substantial change since the existing order was
decreed but subsection (b) authorizes the trial court to modify the prior order to comply with the
Chapter 154 guidelines if doing so is in the child’s best interest. Thus, like in an original Chapter
154 proceeding, the ultimate legislative directive in modification cases is that the guidelines are
just that—factors to be considered but that can be deviated from if doing so is in the child’s best
interest. See Melton v. Toomey, 350 S.W.3d 235, 238 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2011, no pet.)
(“[A] court’s consideration of the child support guidelines in a modification proceeding is
discretionary, not mandatory.”).
Other Code sections further show that the guidelines are relevant in modification cases.
For example, § 156.406 says, “In applying the child support guidelines in a suit under this
subchapter, if the obligor has the duty to support children in more than one household, the court
shall apply the percentage guidelines for multiple families under Chapter 154.” FAM. CODE
§ 156.406.
Finally, Chapter 156 provides other rules applicable to modification proceedings. For
example, an increase in the obligee’s needs, standard of living, or lifestyle “does not warrant an
increase in the obligor’s child support obligation.” Id. § 156.405. Chapter 156, however, limits
the courts’ consideration of a new spouse’s net resources or expenses in a modification suit. Id.
§ 156.404.
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3. Summary of Guiding Rules and Principles
Because we review the child-support order for abuse of discretion, it is helpful to
summarize the foregoing guiding rules and principles relevant to this case:
• The ultimate guiding principle is Daughter’s best interest. See Iliff, 339
S.W.3d at 81.
• The more specific purpose of child support also must be kept in mind: “to
help a custodial parent maintain an adequate standard of living for the
child.” Williams, 821 S.W.2d at 145.
• The Chapter 154 guidelines and the other Chapter 154 factors may be
consulted in a modification proceeding and may be relevant to the child’s
best interest and thus to the propriety of the trial court’s child-support
modification order. Cf. Iliff, 339 S.W.3d at 81 n.5; In re P.C.S., 320 S.W.3d
at 532–34.
C. Issues One and Two: Did the trial court abuse its discretion under the law and the
evidence?
No, it didn’t. The evidence reasonably supports a conclusion that reducing the amount of
monthly child support Father is required to pay Mother from $1,361.86 per month to $700 per
month still produced an amount that was in Daughter’s best interest.
1. Unchallenged Fact Findings
Before addressing Father’s arguments, we note that Father does not challenge all of the
trial court’s fact findings. In seeking modification of the child-support order, Father argued that
Mother’s circumstances have materially and substantially changed such that she now has adequate
resources to support the child and should be ordered to pay child support to Father in strict
compliance with Family Code guidelines. As such, Father naturally does not challenge the trial
court’s implied finding of a material and substantial change of circumstances sufficient to warrant
a modification.3 Nor does he challenge the finding that his net monthly resources are $8,827.65.
3
Although the trial court expressly found a material and substantial change in its final order, we cannot consider findings contained in a
judgment. R.S. v. B.J.J., 883 S.W.2d 711, 715 n.5 (Tex. App.—Dallas 1994, no writ) (construing Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 299a); see also In
re E.A.C., 162 S.W.3d 438, 442–43 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2005, no pet.) (applying Rule 299a to final order in an original SAPCR proceeding).
Instead we imply the finding from the relief granted.
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He does not directly challenge the finding that Mother’s net monthly resources are $4,550, but he
does argue that the trial court erred by failing to find that Mother was intentionally underemployed.
2. Did the trial court abuse its discretion by failing to find that Mother was
intentionally underemployed?
No. We reject Father’s intentional underemployment argument for two reasons.
First, Father does not refer us to evidence establishing that Mother’s true earning potential
was higher than the $4,550 net resources figure the trial court found. He argues instead that the
evidence showed that Mother’s earning potential was $45 per hour, but the evidence he cites relates
to a part-time position. This evidence did not compel the trial court to find that Mother could have
obtained a full-time position at that wage.
Second, the evidence about Mother’s employment supported the trial court’s non-finding
of intentional underemployment. Mother testified about her part-time employment, her full-time
employment pursuing her own business, and her veteran’s disability benefits. She also testified
that she is working on getting a teaching certificate so she can teach twelfth grade. See Iliff, 339
S.W.3d at 82 (trial courts may consider that a parent has laudable reasons for underemployment,
such as seeking further education). Father testified to the reasons he thought Mother was
underemployed, but the trial court was entitled to weigh the witnesses’ testimony and credibility
as it chose. See Reisler v. Reisler, 439 S.W.3d 615, 620 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2014, no pet.). And
the Family Code specifically allowed the court to take Mother’s veteran’s disability benefits into
account in determining whether she was underemployed. FAM. CODE § 154.066(b).
In sum, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by failing to find that Mother was
intentionally underemployed.
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3. Was the trial court’s decision an abuse of discretion based on the evidence
and the § 154.123 factors?
No, on this record the trial court could reasonably determine that requiring Father to pay
$700 per month in child support (rather than $1,361.86 per month) was in Daughter’s best interest.
We review the evidence in light of the § 154.123 factors and favorably to the trial court’s decision.
See In re A.M.W., 313 S.W.3d at 890.
a. Sections 154.123(b)(2), (3), (5), (13): Available Resources,
Employment, and Special or Extraordinary Expenses
(1) Resources
Father does not challenge the finding that his monthly net resources are $8,827.65. Nor
has he successfully attacked the finding that Mother’s monthly net resources are $4,550. Thus,
Father’s monthly net resources are almost twice Mother’s. This is some evidence supporting the
discretionary decision to make Father the net child-support obligor. See In re E.R.C., 496 S.W.3d
at 287.
(2) Expenses
Mother introduced a financial statement stating that her monthly living expenses totaled
$5,732. This exceeded her monthly net resources by over $1,000. Although the trial court
implicitly rejected the part of Mother’s financial statement showing her net monthly income to be
$1,614 (since the court found her monthly net resources to be $4,550), the court was entitled to
credit the remainder of the financial statement if it so chose. Mother also introduced evidence that
in October 2015 she could not afford to pay $110 for Daughter to go on a camping trip. Thus, the
evidence that Mother’s monthly living expenses exceeded her monthly net resources could
reasonably support the trial court’s conclusion that Daughter’s best interest required Father to pay
some child support.
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Father testified that his financial condition had recently deteriorated, he owed his girlfriend
around $90,000, and he was currently running a deficit of $4,000 to $5,000.4 He also testified that
his girlfriend, whom he lived with, had been ill and unable to work. He further testified that (i) he
pays for Daughter’s school activities and social functions and (ii) Mother testified at her deposition
that she had adequate resources in her home to provide for Daughter. But the trial court was
entitled to assess Father’s credibility and give his evidence the weight it deemed appropriate.
Father argues that there was evidence that Mother’s new husband contributes towards their
household expenses and has a gross monthly income of $13,000. In a modification suit, however,
“[t]he court may not add any portion of the net resources of a new spouse to the net resources of
an obligor or obligee in order to calculate the amount of child support to be ordered.” FAM. CODE
§ 156.404(a).
Father also argues that in October 2016 Mother upgraded her living arrangement from an
apartment to a 3,500 square-foot house costing some $434,000. Mother testified that she and her
new husband factored the $1,360 she was receiving in child support into their monthly budget
when they were looking at homes to buy.
Moving into a more expensive residence does not qualify as a material or substantial
change in circumstances sufficient to support an increased child-support award. See In re J.A.H.,
311 S.W.3d 536, 542 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2009, no pet.); see also FAM. CODE § 156.405 (“An
increase in the needs, standard of living, or lifestyle of the obligee since the rendition of the existing
order does not warrant an increase in the obligor’s child support obligation.”). But the order here
did not increase the child-support award; rather, the trial court at Father’s request reduced by
almost half the amount of support he is required to pay.
4
Father did not explain what time period this deficit figure covered.
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Furthermore, the record does not support the conclusion that the trial court based its
decision on Mother’s testimony regarding the impact of the new home on her expenses.
Finally, Father also introduced into evidence Mother’s interrogatory answers in which she
said that the court should set child support based on the Family Code guidelines. But this didn’t
necessarily mean, as Father assumes, that Mother was agreeing she should have to pay Father child
support. Under the guidelines, the trial court could have treated Father as the sole obligor, given
him no offset, and required him to pay Mother significantly more than $700 per month. Thus
Mother’s interrogatory answer does not concede that she should have to pay Father child support.
In sum, the trial court had sufficient evidence of substantive and probative character to
support its decision. Reviewing that evidence in the light most favorable to the child-support order,
we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion when it modified the amount of Father’s
child support from $1,361.86 per month to $700.00 per month.
b. Section 154.123(b)(4): Amount of Possession Time
Mother has expanded standard possession. The order gives her possession of Daughter
roughly seven or more days a month during the school year (counting overnight Thursday visits
as half days, and varying depending on how many Fridays a given month has), plus thirty days
during the summer and certain holidays. See FAM. CODE § 153.317. We estimate that Mother has
custody of Daughter between 20% and 30% of the time. This is consistent with evidence showing
that Father once sent an electronic message referring to his “70%+ parenting schedule.”
Father argues that there was evidence that Mother did not attend some of Daughter’s school
events, but this evidence did not establish a significant failure to exercise possession. He also
argues that Mother did not exercise all of her possession time, but the evidence he cites shows only
a failure to exercise three days of possession in June 2016. Thus, the evidence did not compel the
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trial court to treat Mother as having materially less actual custody of Daughter than the possession
order entitled her to.
In sum, the trial court could reasonably consider Mother’s expanded possession time when
determining whether requiring Father to continue paying child support was in the child’s best
interest.
c. Section 154.123(b)(17): Any Other Factor
Section 154.123(b)(17) is a catch-all provision allowing the trial court to consider any other
reason to depart from the guidelines consistent with the child’s best interest and taking the parents’
circumstances into account. FAM. CODE § 154.123(b)(17).
Under this provision, the trial court could have considered the evidence of the parties’
history. In March 2015, Mother was living in an apartment with her boyfriend. In October 2015,
the Denton County trial court ordered Father to begin paying Mother monthly child support of
$1,360. That same month, Mother was able to move to a larger residence. A year later, she and
her then-husband were able to buy their house, which had many amenities beneficial for Daughter.
During the same 2015–2016 time frame, Mother’s employment situation improved, but her net
monthly resources were still only about half of Father’s.
Taking these facts into account and consulting the child-support guidelines, the trial court
could see that considering each parent as an obligor and offsetting their child-support obligations
would reduce Father’s monthly support obligation to $800. Giving an offset for Father’s health-
insurance obligation reduced it still further to $700—around half what it had been under the prior
order.
d. Conclusion
The test for abuse of discretion is whether the trial court acted without reference to any
guiding rules and principles. As to factual matters, we must defer to the trial court if some evidence
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supports the trial court’s decision. As the foregoing discussion shows, the trial court could have
concluded that the guiding legal principles—the child’s best interest and the need for Mother to
give Daughter an adequate standard of living—were best served by continuing but reducing
Father’s child-support obligation.
4. Did the trial court abuse its discretion by considering “adequate resources”
as a factor in its decision?
Father argues that the Family Code doesn’t allow the trial court to base its child-support
decision on the goal of providing the child with “adequate resources” at both residences. He urges
that this justification (i) ignores the § 154.123(b) factors and (ii) is a “fig leaf” for attempting to
equalize the parents’ income, which he urges is not a legitimate goal of child support.
We reject Father’s argument. In the child-support context, the guiding legal principle is
protecting the child’s best interest, in part by helping a custodial parent give the child an adequate
standard of living. Father calls Mother “the non-custodial parent” and asserts that Daughter lives
with him “full-time.” But these assertions are contrary to the evidence—Mother has possession
of Daughter a significant part of the time and can reasonably be considered a custodial parent.
Thus, the trial court could properly consider whether ordering Father to pay child support was
necessary to help Mother give Daughter an adequate standard of living. The trial court’s expressed
goal of giving Daughter “adequate resources” at both residences is harmonious, if not synonymous,
with the premise that “[t]he function of child support is to help a custodial parent maintain an
adequate standard of living for the child.” Williams, 821 S.W.2d at 145.
The nub of Father’s complaint seems to be that the child-support order benefits Mother as
well as Daughter, as when he argues that the legislature did not intend “to have custodial parents
subsidize the lifestyles of non-custodial parents who choose to work part-time.” To some extent,
this is unavoidable; helping a custodial parent give a child an adequate standard of living will
generally boost the parent’s standard of living as well. But the Family Code addresses Father’s
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concern by including provisions regarding intentional unemployment and underemployment. See
FAM. CODE § 154.066. Sometimes seeming underemployment may be in the child’s best interest,
such as when a parent makes employment decisions in order to spend more time with the child,
start a new business, pursue further education, or address health needs. See Iliff, 339 S.W.3d at
82. It is up to the trial court to consider the evidence and make the necessary determinations. Id.
Here, Mother testified that she had plans to continue improving her situation. She was
planning to become a full-time teacher, and she had begun testing to become certified as a twelfth-
grade teacher. She wanted to become a high-school teacher so that her work schedule would be
the same as Daughter’s school schedule and so they would have summers off together. The trial
court could have reasonably concluded that these decisions were in Daughter’s best interest.
For these reasons, we reject Father’s argument that the trial court abused its discretion by
basing its decision on the intent to provide adequate resources for Daughter at both parents’
residences.
D. Issue Three: Did the trial court abuse its discretion by ordering Father to pay child
support to Mother when she did not plead for such relief?
Father’s third issue argues that the trial court had no discretion to order him to pay child
support because Mother did not plead for such relief in her live counter-petition to modify. We
reject this argument because Father’s pleading was sufficient to support the order.
The status quo when Father moved to modify was an order requiring him to pay Mother
child support of about $1,360 per month. His live pleading requested that the court modify its
order and establish child support according to the statutory guidelines, which Father asserted meant
an order requiring Mother to pay child support to him. Instead, the trial court reduced Father’s
existing child-support obligation, which means the trial court’s order granted relief to Father, not
Mother. Thus, in the context of Father’s existing child-support duty, the modification order was
supported by Father’s pleading and need not also have been supported by Mother’s. See Leithold
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v. Plass, 413 S.W.2d 698, 701 (Tex. 1967) (father’s pleading for a certain custody arrangement
would support a judgment for lesser relief in the form of modified visitation rights).
We overrule Father’s third issue.
IV. DISPOSITION
We affirm the trial court’s Order in Suit to Modify Parent–Child Relationship.
/Bill Whitehill/
BILL WHITEHILL
JUSTICE
180201F.P05
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S
Court of Appeals
Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
JUDGMENT
IN THE INTEREST OF A.R.W., A CHILD On Appeal from the 417th Judicial District
Court, Collin County, Texas
No. 05-18-00201-CV Trial Court Cause No. 417-52158-2016.
Opinion delivered by Justice Whitehill.
Justices Partida-Kipness and Pedersen, III
participating.
On the Court’s own motion, we WITHDRAW our opinion and VACATE our judgment
of August 20, 2019. This is now the judgment of the Court.
In accordance with this Court’s opinion of this date, we AFFIRM the trial court’s
February 12, 2018 Order in Suit to Modify Parent-Child Relationship.
It is ORDERED that appellee Annette Greenslade recover her costs of this appeal from
appellant Ryan West.
Judgment entered November 26, 2019.
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