Court Opinion

ID: 3118033
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-10-16 07:57:17.612229+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T10:20:10.353929
License: Public Domain

Reverse in part, Affirm in part, and Remand; Opinion Filed January 3, 2013.

                                               In The
                                     (£nurt of

                                        No. 05-10-01375-CV

                  IN THE INTEREST OF C.H.C. AND S.M.C., CHILDREN

                            On Appeal from the 380th District Court
                                    Collin County, Texas
                             Trial Court Cause No. 380-54606-03

                                            OPINION
                           Before Justices Moseley, Fillmore, and Myers
                                     Opinion By Justice Myers

        Jennifer C. (Mother) appeals the trial court’s judgment on David C.’s (Father) motion to

modify the order on the suit affecting parent-child relationship. The parties entered into a mediated

settlement agreement on some of their disputes, and they agreed to leave the remaining controversies

to the trial court’s determination. Mother brings eight issues contending (a) the trial court lacked

jurisdiction over the proceedings and its orders are void; (b) there was insufficient evidence of

changed circumstances to support modifying the existing order; (c) the mediated settlement

agreement was invalid as a contract; (d) the final judgment deviated from the mediated settlement

agreement; and (e) there was no evidence to support the order, that Mother pay child support of

$1,333.22 per month. We reverse the trial court’s judgment as to the child-support order and remand

 for determination of the amount of child support, if any, to be paid, and we otherwise affirm the trial
court’s judgment.

                                        BACKGROUND

       Mother and Father are the parentsoftwin girls, C.H.C. and S.M.C, born in 2000. The parties

divorced in 2004. The divorce decree, signed by Judge Charles Sandoval,named the parties joint

managing conservators with Father paying child support of $500 per month. Under the decree,.th.e

parents had nearly equal possession of the children. The decree required the parents to reside in

Dallas or Collin County. The decree also ordered each parent to pay one-half of the children’s

school tuition for the 2004 school year and that $75,000 from an. investment account owned by

Father be used to establish a fund for the children’s educational expenses.

       On December 1,2006, Judge Sandoval modified the conservatorship, possession, and support

of the children. The 2006 order appointed Mother sole managing conservator and Father possessory

conservator of the children, and the order reduced Father’s possession of the children. The 2006

order gave Mother the fight to designate the children’s primary residence with no geographical

restriction. The court ordered that Mother have the exclusive right to make decisions concerning the

children’s education. The modification order required Father to pay $30,000 each year into an

account for the children’s educational expenses with Mother having complete control over the

account. The court increased Father’s child support to $2000 per month, and the court required

Father to pay Mother $27,000 for additional child support accumulated while the motion to modify

was pending. The court also required Father to pay Mother’s attorney’s fees of $416,543.16.

        On January 29, 2009, Father filed a motion to modify the parent-child relationship, which

is the litigation before us on this appeal. On Mother’s motion, the presiding judge recused herself

from the case and requested that another judge be assigned to hear the case. On March 9, 2009, the

presiding regional administrative judge, the Honorable John Ovard, assigned the Honorable John L.

                                                -2-
McCraw Jr. to the case. Judge McCraw presided over the case through the rendition of the order on

appeal.

          On February 8, 201 O, the parties signed a mediated settlement agreement resolving many of

their issues and agreeing that the trial court could determine the unresolved issues. The parties

agreedj to be joint managing conservators and that the children would reside in Dallas County or the

contiguous counties, but they did not agree who would have the right to designate the children’s

residence. They also agreed the children would attend Fairhill School in Piano and that Father would

pay all expenses for them to attend the school, which would extinguish Father’s obligation to pay

$30,000 annually into the educational account. They agreed Father and his current wife, Stacy,

would pay Mother $250,000, which would extinguish all prior debts Father owed Mother or her

attorneys under other court orders. They also agreed that before either parent could file a new suit

against the other parent, other than an enforcement action, the suing parent would be required to post

$100,000, half of which would be disbursed immediately to the parent who had not brought the suit.

The parties also agreed that in the event of a dispute regarding the agreement, the mediator, the

Honorable Linda Thomas, would be the binding arbitrator of the dispute. Mother, Father, Stacy and

their attorneys signed the agreement. Judge McCraw approved and adopted the agreement the next

day.

          After the mediated settlement agreement, the remaining issues were possession of the

children and the rights, powers, and duties of the parents as conservators, including which parent

would have the right to designate the children’s primary residence; child support; and the terms for

Father’s payment of the $250,000. Following a trial before the court, Judge McCraw signed the

      Some of these refills v.’~re expressly provided in the agreement, and others constituted the mediator’s interpretation and clarification of the
agreement.
"Final Order-’ in .this case, which provided ~at Father would have the right to designate the

children’s primary residence, Father would have possession of the children on weeknights during

the school year and Mother would have possession on the first, third and fifth weekends, and Moth .er

would pay child support of $1,333.22 per month. The final order entered judgment against Father.

for the agreed debt to Mother for $250,000 at 5 percent interest.

       After entering the final order in this case, Judge McCmw recused himself. The Honorable,

Robin Sage was then appointed to hear any further matters.

                            APPOINTMENT OF JUDGE MeCRAW

       In her first issue, Mother contends that all of the orders signed by Judge McCmw are v?id

because there is no order of assignment in the file and no original authenticated copy of the

assignment established pursuant to rule 77 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. - In her second

issue; Mother contends that Judge McCraw’s assignment was for one day only, March 9, 2009, and-

-any orders signed by him after that date, including the order on appeal, are void.

        Before Mother filed her notice of appeal, she filed a petition for writ of mandamus in this

Court arguing that Judge McCraw’s orders in this case were void because the judge was never

properly assigned to hear the case. We denied relief because Mother "has not shown she is entitled

to the relief requested." In re CarT, No. 05-10-01071-CV, 2010 WL 3620466 (Tex. App.--Dallas

Sept. 17, 2010, orig. proceeding [man& denied]). Mother then filed her notice of appeal on October

26, 2010.

        On December 13, 2010, while the appeal was pending before this Court, Mother filed a

motion in the trial court seeking to vacate all of Judge McCraw’s orders as void for the reasons she

argues in this appeal. Seeln re Car),, No. 10-1010 (Tex. 2010). On January 24, 2011, Judge Sage

held a hearing on the motion and found that Judge McCraw had authority to hear the case at the time
he entered the challenged orders.

                                   No Assignment Order Filed in the Trig .Court

          In her first issue, Mother argues there ~s no order assigning Judge McCmw to hear the case

on file in the trial court. When Mother’s attorney on. appeal investigated Judge McCraw’s

 appointment, he learned that no copy of the order was filed in the trial court and that the parties and

 the administrative region’s presiding judge, Judge Ovard, did .not have a copy of any order

 appointing Judge McCraw. On August 27, 2010, appellant’s counsel received by fax from. Judge

 McCraw a document purporting to be an order appointing Judge McCraw and signed by Judge Ovard

 on March 9, 2009.2

           The presiding judge of an administrative region has authonty to appoint certain active and

. retired judges to hear cases as necessary. See TEX. GOV’T CODEANN. §.§ 74.052-.0551 (West 2005).

 -These statutes do not require the order of assignment to be filed in the papers of the courtorthatthe "

 parties or the administrative region’s presiding judge preserve a copy of the order. There is:no

 requirement that an original or copy of the assignment order be maintained by anyone. Mother does

 not cite any authority requiring that the order be filed in the trial court.

           Mother also argues we cannot consider the faxed copy of the order because Father did not

 comply with rule 77 for authentication of lost records and papers. If papers or records are lost or

 destroyed during the pendency of a suit, rule 77 permits the trial court, on agreement of the parties

 or on sworn motion and a heating, to substitute a copy for the lost or destroyed original document

 and to have the copy filed with the clerk. See TEX. R. C~v. P. 77. The parties have filed a

 supplemental record containing the faxed copy of the order. Accordingly, the copy is part of the

    2 Printing on the bottom of the copy of the onte~ in the record indicates it was sent by fax on March 9, 2009, August 25,2010, and on tim twenty-
 seventh day of an illegible month in 2010.
record.

          Even if Mother does dispute the authenticity of the faxed copy of the order, that dispute is

a fact issue for the trial court. Judge Sage heard Mother’s complaints about the faxed order and

found that Judge McCraw had authority to hear the case. We conclude the trial court resolved any

fact questions concerning the authenticity of the faxed copy. We overrule Mother’s first issue.

                                The Terms of the Assignment Order

          In her second issue, Mother contends that under the terms of the assignment order,, the

assignment of Judge McCraw was valid for only one day, March 9, 2009, and that any orders signed

by Judge McCraw after that day are void. The assignment order in the record, which was the copy

of the order faxed by Judge McCraw to Mother’s attorney, states:

          Pursuant to Article 74.056, Texas Government Code, I hearby [sic] assign the:
                                    Honorable John L. McCraw Jr.,
                                                                                                         . ij

                              Senior Justice of The 5th Court of Appeals
                         To the 380th District Court of Collin County, Texas.

                  This assignment is for the period of 1 days [sic] beginning 3/9/2009,.
          providing that the assignment shall continue after the specified period of time as may
          be necessary for the assigned Judge to complete trial of any case or cases begun
          during this period, and to pass on motions for new trial and all other matters growing
          out of cases tried by the Judge herein assigned during this period, or the undersigned
          presiding judge has terminated this assignment in writing, whichever occurs first.

                            CONDITION(S) OF ASSIGNMENT (IF ANY):

          To hear Cause No. 380-54606-2203: In the Interest of[C.H.C.] and [S.M.C.], minor
          children.

                   The Clerk is directed to post a copy of this assignment on the notice board so
          that attorneys and parties may be advised of this assignment, in accordance with the
          law.

                  ORDERED this 9 day of March, 2009

                                                          /S/John Ovard
                                                                                 John Ovard, Presiding Judge
                                                                                 First Administrative Judicial Region

Printing on the faxed copy indicates it was faxed on March 9, 2009 at 14:29.

          Mother argues that, under the terms of this order, Judge McCraw’s assignment was only for

March 9, 2009, which was the same day he was assigned. In interpreting the order, we must read it

as a whole in the context in which it was issued and not permit form to prevail over substance. See

In re Richardson, 252 S.W.3d 822, 829-30 (Tex. App.--Texarkana 2008, orig. proceeding).

           Mother asserts, "it is clear that the order expressly limited Judge McCraw’s assignment to

one day, unless the trial of the case started on March 9, 2009." To read the order as permitting Judge

McCraw to sit only on March 9, 2009 unless the trial began on that day would have made it

impossible for him to consider any matters in this case. Father’s petition to modify, which re-opened

the case, was filed on January 29, 2009, only thirty-nine days before March 9. The rules of

procedure require the court to give the parties at least forty-five days’ notice of a trial setting absent

the parties’ agreement. See TEX. R. CIV. P. 245. Nothing shows the parties agreed to begin the trial

on March 9. Thus, Judge McCraw could not have begun the trial on March 9. The only motion

pending on March 9 was Father’s motion asking the presiding judge to reconsider her order recusmg

herself. However, that motion had not been pending for the required three days before March 9.3

See TEX. R. CIr. P. 21. Accordingly, there was nothing Judge McCraw could have done on March

9. To read the order as Mother requests would have meant that Judge McCraw was appointed to do

nothing on March 9, and that after March 9, there would have been no la-ial judge in this family law

case for an indefinite period of time.

     3 Fathm" filed the motion on Thursday, March 5, 2009 and certified it was served on the other patti. "e~ on that dat~. Rule 21 required the motion

 are not included in the computalaon of the three days. "I’EX. R. CrY. P. 4; see Terry Johns Autos., inc. v. 3tare, 121 3.w.!a
 App.--Corpus Christi 1986, no writ). Thus, the motion had b~m pending for only one day before Ma~h 9, 2009.
       The Texarkana Court of Appeals faced a similar issue. In In re Richardson, the court

considered an assignment order identical to the one in this case except for the date of the order

(February 28, 2007), the date the assignment began ("I days [sic] beginning 2128/2007"), the identity

of the assigned judge (the Honorable Paul Banner), and the cause number and style of the case. In

re Richardson, 252 S.W.3d at 824-25. The Texarkana court observed, "[W]e have an order which

could either be read to grant authority for one day or to grant Judge Banner authority ’to hear’ the

particular case referenced." Id. at 829.

       In In re Richardson, it was virtually impossible for the trial to begin on the day of the judge’s

appointment. See id. at 830. The Texarkana court stated it would not "read the order as an

essentially useless exercise." Instead, the court concluded that the order gave the assigned judge "the

authority to hear the named case on its merits" because to do otherwise the appellate court "would

have to ignore the conditions of the assignment: ’To hear Cause No. 99C985-202; Southwest

Construction Receivables, Ltd, et al v. Regions Bank.’" Id. at 829-30. Under the requirement that

the court of appeals consider the order as a whole, it could not "simply ignore that language." Id.

at 830. The court of appeals concluded the assigned judge had authority to hear the case atter the

date of assignment:

        The most reasonable reading of the substance of this order within the context in
        which it was issued is that Judge Banner was assigned to hear this case when Judge
        Pesek recused himself. By reconciling the language in the order taken as a whole and
        considering the context in which the order was issued, we conclude that Judge
        Banner has authority, pursuant to Judge Ovard’s assignment order, to hear the
        underlying cause on ~ts merits.

        In this case, reading the order as permitting Judge McCraw to hear the case on March 9, 2009

 only, unless the trial began on that date, would have made the order"an essentially useless exercise"
because there was no trial, motion, or any other proceeding Judge McCraw could have heard on that

date. Considering the order as a whole and the context in which it was issued, we conclude the most

reasonable reading of the order is that Judge McCraw had authority to hear the underlying cause on

its merits, with that authority beginning on March 9, 2009 and continuing through the trial and

determination of post-trial motions "and all other matters growing out of" the assigned case.

        We conclude the orders signed by Judge McCraw after March 9, 2009 were not void. We

overrule Mother’s second issue.

                        REQUIREMENT OF MATERIALLY AND
                     SUBSTANTIALLY CHANGED CIRCUMSTANCES

        Mother’s fifth, sixth, and seventh issues concem the trial court’s determination that a material

change in circumstances had occurred after the 2006 order. In the fifth issue, Mother contends the

trial court erred in considering events occurring after Father filed the motion to modify in

determining whether there was a material change in circumstances. Mother’s sixth and seventh

issues concern the sufficiency of the evidence to show there was a change of circumstances. We

conclude the parties waived the statutory requirement of changed circumstances by signing the

mediated settlement agreement.

        The Family Code permits the trial court to modify an existing order of conservatorship or

possession of a child when "the circumstances of the child, a conservator, or other party affected by

the order have materially and substantially changed" since the date of the rendition of the order or

 a mediated settlement agreement on which the order is based. TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. §

 156.101 (a)(1) (West Supp. 2012). Waiver is the intentional relinquishment of a right actually or

 constructively known, or intentional conduct inconsistent with claiming that right. Jernigan v.

 Langley, 111 S.W.3d 153, 156 (Tex. 2003). Waiver is largely a matter of intent, and for implied
waiver to be found through a party’s acttons, intent must be clearly demonstrated by the surrounding

facts and circumstances. Id. There cannot be waiver of a right unless the person sought to be

charged with waiver says or does something inconsistent with an intent to rely upon such right. Id.

Waiver is ordinarily a question of fact; however, when the surrounding facts and circumstances are

undisputed, as in this case, it is a question of law: Id. at 156-57.

        We presume Mother had knowledge of the statute. See Greater Hous. Tramp. Co. v.

Phillips, 801 S.W.2d 523,525 n.3 (Tex. 1990) ("all persons are presumed to know the law"). When

Mother signed the mediated settlement agreement, she agreed to the trial court’s modification of the

order to the extent set forth in the agreement. Included in the agreement was the term that the trial

court would determine the "[t]erms and conditions of possesmon and access," the "[flights,

privileges and duties of the [joint managing conservators]" and "[a]ny other issues currently pending

before the 380th District Court." Mother’s act of signing the mediated settlement agreement was

inconsistent with her claiming the right not to have the existing order modified absent a showing of

substantially and materially changed circumstances. Accordingly, we conclude Mother waived that

requirement.

        We overrule Mother’s fifth, sixth, and seventh issues.

                                  CONTRACTUAL DEFENSES

        In her third issue, Mother contends the trial court abused its discretion in upholding the

 mediated settlement agreement because it lacked consideration, any consideration failed, the

 agreement is ambiguous and lacks essential terms, there ex|sts an underlying mutual mistake, and

 there was no meeting of the minds between the parties.
         Family Code section 153.0071 provides that a mediated settlement agreement in a suit

 affecting the parent-child relationship "is binding on the parties" if the agreement contains a
prominently displayed statement that the agreement is not subject to revocation and the agreement

is signed by each party and each party’s attorneys present at the mediation. TEX. FAM. CODE ANN.

§ 153.0071(d) (West 2008). The agreement in this case meets these requirements.4 If an agreement

meets the requirements, "a party is entitled to judgment on the mediated settlement agreement

notwithstanding Rule 11, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, or another rule of law." Id. § 153.0071 (e).

          It is not clear whether the defenses of lack of consideration, failure of consideration, mutual

mistake, and lack of meeting of the minds apply to mediated settlement agreements under section

153.0071. Father argues they do not apply because subsection (e) provides that judgment may be

entered on the mediated settlement agreement "notwithstanding... another rule of law," and the

defenses of lack of and failure of consideration, mutual mistake, and lack of meeting of the minds

are "another rule of law.’’s Courts have considered the merits of the defenses of mutual mistake and

no meeting of the minds to mediated settlement agreements under section 153.0071(e) and the

similar provision in section 6.602(c) without discussing the effect of the "notwithstanding...

another rule of law" provision. See Toler v. Sanders, 371 S.W.3d 477, 481-82 (Tex. App.--Houston

[lst Dist.] 2012, no pet.); Milner v. Milner, 360 S.W.3d 519, 524 (Tex. App.--Fort Worth 2010),

     The first page of the agr~-ment states, in boldfaced, underlined, and capitalized type:

          Agreement is binding.

          The parties hereto agree that this mediated settlernem agreement is binding on said l~rties and is not subject to revncadon or
          modification unless same is in writing and signed by all attorneys and their clients. Both parties acknowledge that the court
          may emexjudgruem based ulxm this mediated settlemem agreement and that neither party may withdraw their consent to the
          terms of this MSA [mediated settleruent agreemem].

(Emphasis omitted.) The agreement is signed by Mother, Father, Stacy (Fath~’s otrrent wife), and their attorneys.

   5 In Milner v. Milner, the Fort Worth Court of Appeals vacated ajudgtnent on a mediated settlement agreement concerning the division of marital
property under Family Code section 6.602, concluding there was no meeting of the minds. See Milner v. Milner, 360 S.W.3d 519, 524 (Tex.
App.--Fort Worth 2010), aff’d on other grounds, 361 S.W.3d 615 (Tex. 2012); see also TEx. FAro. CODE A/~. § 6.602(c) (West 2006). Section
6.602 contains the same language as section 153.0071 concerning the binding nature of the mediated settlement agreements: "a party ~ entitled to
judgment on the mediated settlement agreement notwithstanding Rule I I, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, or another rule of law." Compare FAM.
§ 6.602(c) with id. § 153.0071(e). The Texas Supreme Court agreed the case needed to be remanded, but it did ~ ~.b~ use ..~e a ,gree~a., t ~
ambtguous" and therefore unenforeeable. See Milner v Milner, 36 i S W 3d 615, 623 O’er- 2012). The supreme court ma not a~scuss whether me
defense of a lack of meeting of the minds constitutes "another rule of law.

                                                                      -11-
afffdon other grounds, 361 S.W.3d 615 (Tex. 2012); Mullins v. Mullins, 202 S.W.3d 869, 875--78

(Tex. App.--Dallas 2006, pet. denied). No court appears to have considered the affect of that

language on the defenses of lack of consideration and failure of consideration. Without determining

whether any of these defenses are applicable to an agreement under section 153.0071, we conclude

Mother has failed to show the trial court reversibly erred in entering judgment on the agreement.

                                                       Absence of Consideration

            We first consider whether the agreement lacked consideration. "Consideration is a present

exchange bargained for in return for a promise. It consists of either a benefit to the promisor or a

detriment to the promisee. The detriment must induce the making of the promise, and the promise

must induce the incurring of the detriment." Roark v. Stallworth Oil & Gas, Inc., 813 S.W.2d 492,

496 (Tex. 1991) (citations omitted). A lack of consideration occurs when a contract, at its inception,

does not impose obligations on both parties. Chung-Loon, LLC v. Cergon, lnc., No. 05-10-01171-

CV, 2012 WL 1678105, at *7 (Tex. App.--Dallas May 15, 2042, no pet.). The agreement in this

case imposed obligations on both parties: it made them joint managing conservators, which includes

many obligations. See, e.g., TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 153.073-.076 (West 2008 & Supp. 2012).

            Mother argues the agreement lacked consideration because she gamed nothing from the

agreement.6 Mother’s argument overlooks the fact that, in the agreement, Stacy agreed to pay

Mother the $250,000 and she signed the agreement. The evidence showed Father had no assets.

Stacy, however, had a working interest in some oil and gas production and had investments in

     6 Under the 2006 order, Mother was the sole managing conservator, she had the right to designate the children’s primary r~iden~ with no
geographical restrictions, she had the exclusive right to make decisions concerning the children’s education, Father was required to pay $30,000
annually into an educational account for the children over which Mother had sole control, and Mother held judgmen~ against Father for over
5500,1)00. Under the mediated settlement agn~ment, Mother was a joint managing conservator, the deten’aination of the panmt with the right to
designate the children’s primary residence was left to the trial court, the agreement r~quired Mother to pay.a lidgalion deposit of $100,00~. before
having the right to bring future suits, she Inst the right to make decisions conc~roing the children’s educatmn because the agn:ement reqmt~d the
children to attend the Fairhill School, Father was r~lieved of the duty to pay $30,000 annually into the education account, and Father would be relieved
of his judgment debt to her of over $500,000 by paying only $250,000.

                                                                        -12-
commercial property and "some retail business." Stacy’s inclusion in the agreement provided

Mother extra security for payment of the $250,000, which was a benefit to Mother. We conclude

the mediated settlement agreement was supported by consideration.

                                     Failure of Consideration

       Mother also argues the consideration failed. Failure of consideration occurs when the

promised performance fails because of some supervening cause after a contract is formed. Burges

v. Mosley, 304 S.W.3d 623,628 (Tex. App.--Tyler 2010, no pet.); USBank, N.A.v. Prestige Ford

Garland Ltd. P’ship, 170 S.W.3d 272, 279 (Tex. App.--Dallas 2005, no pet.). Failure of

consideration may result as a consequence of one party’s failure to perform its obligations under the

agreement. USBank, N.A., 170 S.W.3d at 279.

       Mother argues the consideration of Stacy agreeing to pay the $250,000 and signing the

agreement failed because.Father testified at trial that he and Stacy no longer had $250,000 available

to pay Mother due to the attorney’s fees they incurred during the time between signing the settlement

agreement and the trial. However, Father testified he could make payments of $8000 per month

toward the $250,000 if he was not required to pay a substantial amount of Mother’s attorney’s fees.

The final order entered judgment against Father for the $250,000 at five percent interest. The

judgment did not award either side attorney’s fees. Nothing in the record shows Father would be

unable to pay $8000 per month as he testified.

        The mediated settlement agreement provided that "the terms and conditions of payment [of

the $250,000] will be negotiated in a subsequent agreement or tried at the same ttme any remaining

issues are tried." This provision shows the $250,000 was not due at the time the settlement

agreement was signed. There was no "subsequent agreement," so "the terms and conditions of

payment" awaited the trial court’s determination. When Father testified at the heating, the trial court

                                                 -13-
had not yet decided the terms of payment, so the $250,000 was not due. Father testified that he could

make payments of $8000 per month. The record does not show Mother made a demand for the

$250,000 after the final order was signed. Accordingly, Mother has not shown there was a failure

of consideration.

       Mother also argues there was failure of consideration because Stacy’s liability on the

$250,000 was not included in the final order. Stacy was not named or served in the lawsuit. Persons

who are not named or served in a lawsuit are not parties, and a judgment against a person who is not

a party is void. See Schlueter v. Care),, 112 S.W.3d 164, 172 (Tex. App.--Fort Worth 2003, pet.

denied). Because Stacy was not a party, the trial court could not impose liability on her in the final

order. The record does not show that Mother has made a demand to Stacy or tried to sue Stacy on

the agreement for payment of the $250,000, nor does Mother-argue that the agreement is not

enforceable against Stacy. Accordingly, Mother has not shown that Stacy is not liable .under the.

agreement even though she is not included in the judgment on the agreement.

                                          Mutual Mistake

        Mother argues the settlement agreement is invalid as to the $250,000 payment because of

mutual mistake. An agreement may be avoided where the parties contracted under a misconception

or ignorance of a material fact. Williams v. Glash, 789 S.W.2d 261, 264 (Tex. 1990); see

Smith-Gilbard v. Perry, 332 S.W.3d 709, 713 (Tex. App.--Dallas 2011, no pet.). A unilateral

mistake does not provide grounds for relief even though it results in inequity to one of the parties.

Smith-Gilbard, 332 S.W.3d at 714. The mutual mistake urged in this case was the trial court’s

ability to determine the terms and conditions for payment of the $250,000. The agreement provided

that the terms and conditions could be "tried at the same time any rematmng issues are tried." At

trial, the court stated that, absent an agreement between the parties as to a payment schedule, all the
court could do was enter a judgment for Mother for the $250,000. Mother’s attorney agreed with

the court’s analysis. The judgment provides:

       Extinguishment of Prior Debt

       The parties have agreed that the sum of $250,000.00 is to be paid to [Mother].
       Payment of the sum of $250,000.00 will extinguish all prior debts that [Father]
       currently owes [Mother] or her attorneys under any existing court order. The terms
       and condition[s] of payment of the $250,000.00 are as follow[s]: IT IS ORDERED
       that [Mother] is granted a judgment against [Father] in the amount of $250,000.00,
       such judgment bearing interest at 5% per annum compounded annually, from the date
       the judgment is signed until paid, for which let execution issue if it is not paid.

Mother argues the judgment conflicts with the mediated settlement agreement because the judgment

did not set forth the terms and conditions for payment. We disagree. The judgment set forth the

terms and conditions: the full amount was due immediately as a judgment against Father and it

would earn interest of five percent per year compounded annually. Mother argues there was mutual

mistake because the trial court did not clarify whether the prior judgment- debts Father owed would

be extinguished upon full payment, partial payment, or as long as Father made monthly payments.

Mother, however, failed to show that Father mistakenly expected the trial court to make that

determination. Accordingly, Mother failed to prove the mistake, if any, was mutual.

       We conclude Mother has not shown the agreement was the product of mutual mistake.

                                     No Meeting of the Minds

       Mother also argues the mediated settlement agreement was not a valid contract because there

was no meeting of the minds. "To create an enforceable contract, the minds of the parties must meet

with respect to the subject matter of the agreement and all its essential terms." Principal Life Ins.

Co. v. Revalen Dev., LLC, 358 S.W.3d 451,455 (Tex. App.--Dallas 2012, pet. denied).

        Mother argues there was no meeting of the minds between the parties regarding the provision

that Father and Stacy would pay Mother $250,000:
       The provision of the MSA [mediated settlement agreement] expressly contemplates
       not only [Father] would pay $250,000, but Stacy as well; the Final Order provides
       only for a judgment against [Father]. Stacy testified to her belief that the obligation
       would be enforceable against her, and to her understanding that her agreement to be
       jointly liable for payment was pivotal to the agreement. This is sufficient evidence
       to show there was no meeting of the minds, as well as mutual mistake, by the parties
       in entering into the MSA.

(Footnote omitted.) We disagree. The basis of Mother’s argument is that Stacy’s agreement to pay

Mother $250,000 is not enforceable against her because judgment was not entered against her in this

case. As discussed above, the trial court could not enter judgment against Stacy in this case because

she was not a party to the litigation. Her lack of party status was well known to Mother and Father

and was repeatedly pointed out during the trial. The mediated settlement agreement did not state that

a judgment for $250,000 would be entered against Stacy in this case. Instead, it states, "The parties

agree that... Father and Stacy [C.] shall pay to Mother the sum of $250,000 .-..." The record does

not showthat Mother has tried to enforce the agreement against Stacy, so.Mother cannot demonstrate.

thatthe agreement is not enforceable against Stacy. Mother’s claim of no meeting oftheminds (as

well as mutual mistake) on this ground fails.

        Mother also asserts there could not have been a meeting of the minds because, comparing

the circumstances before and after the mediated settlement agreement, "it seems obvious that there

could not possibly have been a meeting of the minds. The MSA represents a complete windfall for

[Father]. [Mother] does not benefit at all from the MSA." After describing the differences between

the 2006 and 2010 orders, see supra note 6, she states, "It is incredulous to believe that such a result

was intended by [Mother] or her attorneys at the time the MSA was entered into. There could not

have been a meeting of the minds between the parties which foresaw this result." Mother’s assertion

is speculation unsupported by legal argument, citation to the record, or to any authority.

Accordingly, we conclude it is waived. See TEX. R. APP. P. 38.1(h) (appellate brief must contain a
clear and concise argument for the contentions made, with appropriate citations to authorities and

the record.); In re J.P., 365 S.W.3d 833, 837 (Tex. App.--Dallas 2012, no pet.) (failure to cite

applicable authority or provide substantive analysis waives issue on appeal).

           We conclude Mother has not shown there was no meeting of the minds.

                                                                 Missing Terms

           Mother argues the mediated settlement agreement was not enforceable because it left terms

open for future negotiation. As the supreme court stated:

           In order to be legally binding, a contract must be sufficiently definite in its terms so
           that a court can understand what the promisor undertook. The material terms of the
           contract must be agreed upon before a court can enforce the contract. Where an
           essential term is open for future negotiation, there is no binding contract.

T.O. Stanley Boot Co. v. Bank of El Paso, 847 S.W.2d 218, 221 (Tex. 1992) (citations omitted). The

mediated settlement agreement provided that certain terms would be left open for future negotiation,

or failing that, for determination by the court at trial.7

            The agreement stated,

            The parties further agree that the remaining issues shall be negotiated with Hon.
            Linda Thomas

                        ¯           Terms and conditions of possession and access

                        ¯           Rights, privileges and duties of the JMCs

                        ¯           Any other ~ssues currently pending before the 380th District Court.

            If said issues cannot be resolved through mediation with Hon. Linda Thomas, they

     7 Moth~ slates that the parties signed the agreement at the end of the first day of mediation and ag~. to ~ the next.day to negotiate fu~...~
 regarding essential terms, including the terms a~..d.conditions of child possession and access by the..p~es; their ng~. t~,. du~es, and.powe~ .as jfl.,mt

       " on t~l~:l"
 -Ii~"lng    "       " - -- st~
                    motloll 1o "J-asio¢
                                    "-- ---~*lated
                                          tu~ t~t~ settlement a"~’~’~e~L
                                                                  ~.’-~.     At tlaat taeanng,   Morner
                                                                                                     .   s atlorney
                                                                                                                . . quesuoneu
                                                                                       .
                      " " Fathe~ obected
  occurnng at the medmuon            ~      . to this
                                                 q line of ueslaonmg,
                                                             . .         .and
                                                                           . .the trial court sustained the objection, tv~ome~ s
                              :---:--~-illofex"*"tto~. The record does not show thts temraonY was admitted mt°ev~dence- Momerao~not .a~.
  tlle~"VlllfflC.~MOm~..now~-tt~tt, a.u                ~’~’ - -              ¯        "      "          trial       andwema notconsld~
  -                                                          77 ex 2006 " Nansen
                                                                            ),     u .tt- t~organ ~nase aan& tv.a., ~+o o.,,._,u ,,,:,, .-- ,*.~ ~ ,,.~.
 ,t SeeMack Tnacks. Inc. v. Tam, z, 206 S.W.3d 572, 5 (T .
 App.,~--Dallas 201 I, no pet.).

                                                                            -17-
        will be submitted for trial before Judge John McCraw, sitting for the 380th District
        Court.

The issue in this case is whether the agreement is enforceable despite leaving issues open for further

negotiation.

        In the T.O. Stanley case, quoted above and cited by Mother, the plaintiffs sued the bank for

allegedly breaching an agreement to make available to them a $500,000 line of credit. T.O. Stanley,
847 S.W.2d at 221. The plaintiffs, however, presented no evidence of the interest rate for the loan

or for the repayment terms. Id. at 222. Thus, "the alleged contract failed for indefiniteness." ld.

As the supreme court stated, "These elements were material to this contract, and a court is not free

to supply them." Id. In the case before us, however, the parties expressly agreed that the trial court

was to provide the m~sslng terms. Also, by agreeing that the undecided issues could be determined

by the trial court, the parties essentially agreed that the undecided terms were not material to the

enforcement of the terms on which the p.arties did agree. We conclude that the agreement is not

rendered unenforceable because terms were left open for further negotiation or for determination by

the trial court.

                                              Ambiguity

         Mother next argues the mediated settlement agreement is unenforceable because three of its

terms are ambiguous. When construing a contract, our primary goal is to determine the parties"

intent as expressed in the terms of the contract. Chrysler lns. Co. v. Greenspoint Dodge of Hous.,

Inc., 297 S.W.3d 248,252 (Tex. 2009); Coker v. Coker, 650 S.W.2d 391,393 (Tex. 1983). Contract

 language that can be given a certain or defmite meaning is not ambiguous and is construed as a

 matter of law. Chrysler Ins. Co., 297 S.W.3d at 252; Coker, 650 S.W.2d at 393. A contract is

 ambiguous when its meaning is uncertain and doubtful or it is reasonably susceptible to more than
one meaning. Coker,.650 S.W.2d at 393; United Protective Servs., Inc. v. I4/. I/ill. Ltd. P’ship, 180
S.W.3d 430, 432 (Tex. App.-Dallas 2005, no pet.).

        Payment of $250,000

        Mother asserts the agreement is ambiguous as to the payment of the $250,000. The mediator

clarified the $250,000 payment by determining that payment of the $250,000 would extinguish all

prior debts Father owed Mother and her attorneys under any court order existing on February 8,

20 I0. Mother argues the contract is ambiguous because it does not specify when the debts owed by

Father are considered satisfied---on payment of the $250,000 or on the signing of the mediated

settlement agreement. The final order is in accordance with the mediator’s determination) Mother

does not assert that the mediator lacked authority to make this determination. The mediator resolved

this ambiguity by determining that payment of the $250,000 would extinguish the prior judgment

debt.

         Furthermore, the record does not show that Mother, since the signing of the final order, has

sought recovery of the judgment debts existing on February 8, 2010. Until Mother brings suit for,

and is denied recovery of, the pre-existing debts, any injury to Mother due to this asserted ambiguity

 will be contingent or remote. Accordingly, this issue is not ripe for determination. See Patterson

 v. Planned Parenthood ofHous. & SE Tex., Inc., 971 S.W.2d 439, 442 (Tex. 1998) ("[R]ipeness asks

 whether the facts have developed sufficiently so that an injury has occurred or is likely to occur,

    8 The final order provides,

          Extinguishment of Prior Debt

                     The parties have agreed that the sum of $250,0~O is to b~ paid to [Mother]. Payrmmt of the sum of $250,000 will
          extinguish all prior debts that [Father] c~tly owes [Motheri or her attorneys under any existing court order.

                      The terms and conditions of payment of the 5250,000 are as follow[s]: IT kS ORDERED that [Mother] is granted
          a judgment against [Father] in the amount of $250,000, such judgment bearing interesI at 5"/, per annum compounded
          annually, frnm the date the judgment is signed until paid, for which let execution issue if it is not paid.
rather than being contingent or remote.").

          Mother also argues the provision is ambiguous because the terms of payment were not

 included in the agreement. However, the agreement provided"the terms and conditions of payment

will be negotiated in a subsequent agreement or tried at the same time any remaimng issues are

tried." This provision has a clear meaning---if the parties cannot work out the terms and conditions

of payment, then the parties could try that issue with the remammg issues.

          We conclude Mother has not shown the provisions concerning the payment of $250,000 are

ambiguous.

          Enrollment at Fairhill School

          Mother asserts the agreement’s terms concerning the children’s enrollment at Fairhill School

are ambiguous. The agreement stated, "The parties agree that... The children shall remain enrolled

- in Fairhill School .... " During the trial, a dispute arose between the parties as to whether, pursuant

to the agreement, the children were to remain enrolled at Fairhill School indefinitely or only through

the end of the spring 2010 semester. The mediated settlement agreement provided, "In the event of

a dispute regarding reducing this MSA to an order, [the mediator] will be the binding arbitrator to

 such disputes." The trial court remanded this issue, and several others, to the mediator for

determination. The mediator then determined, "The children shall remain in Fairhill School until

 further order of the court or further agreement of the parties." The final order is in accordance with

the mediator’s determination.9 Mother does not assert that the mediator lacked authority to make

    9 Concerning the children’s school enrollment and costs, the final order provides,

          School - IT IS ORDERED that the children shall remain enrolled in Faidaill School until further order of the court or further
          agreement of parties.

          IT IS ORDERED that [Father] is authorized !o execute all documents needed to facilitate enrollmeat and attendance of the
          children, the subject of this suit in the Fairhill School independent of any other pe~-~on until further order of the court.

          IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Father... shall pay all expenses for the children in attending Fairhill School until further
  this determination. The mediator’s determination resolved any ambiguity:

          Parenting Facilitator

          Mother also asserts the mediated settlement agreement is ambiguous concerning the

  appointmentof a parenting facilitator. Tlae agreement provided, "The parties agree that... Dr.

  Alexandra Doyle shall serve as a Parenting Facilitator. If Dr. Doyle is not available for this

  responsibility, the parties will determine by’mutual agreement another parenting facilitator." The

  mediator also determined and clarified the agreement: "Any parenting facilitator acting under the

  MSA executed on February 8, 2010, shall serve as long as the court deems it necessary or further

  agreement of the parties." During the trial, Dr. Doyle testified that because she was the children’s

  counselor, she believed it, would be inappropriate for her to be the parenting facilitator. She

  recommended Patrick Savage be appointed as the parenting facilitator. The trial court’s final order

:. does: not appoint a parenting-.i facilitator.- Instead, it provides: an exception to the.-~lr00~000

  litigation-deposit ~equirement"ifeither party files suit to appoint a parenting facilitator, as this issue

  was reserved for further review by the Court." However, the parties informed us that while the case

  was pending on appeal, the parties agreed on the appointment of a parenting facilitator and the trial

  court appointed the parenting facilitator. Accordingly, the ambiguity, if any, for the appointment of

  a parenting facilitator when the parties do not agree is no longer a controversy in this case. Appellate

  courts decide only those issues in which a controversy exists. State for Protection ofCockerham v.

  Cockerham, 218 S.W.3d 298, 302 (Tex. App.---Texarkana 2007, no pet.). Because there is no

  existing controversy regarding this issue, we do not decide it.

          We conclude Mother has not shown any ambiguity m the mediated settlement agreement

  warrants reversal in this case. We overrule Mother’s third issue.

          order of the court or f~rther ag~ement of the parties - [Fath~] shall pay 100% attd [Mother] shall pay 0% of the cost.

                                                                    -21-
                                     LITIGATION DEPOSIT

       Mother also contends the $100,000 litigation-deposit requirement in the mediated settlement

agreement is void because it is against public policy. A court can declare a contract void as against

public policy and refuse to enforce it. See Peeler v. Hughes & Luce, 868 S.W.2d 823, 829 (Tex.

App.--Dallas 1993), aj~d, 909 S.W.2d 494 (Tex. 1995); see also James v. Fulcrod, 5 Tex. 512,520

(1851) ("That contracts against public policy are void and will not be carried into effect by courts

of justice are principles of law too well established to i’equire the support of authorities .... "). In

determining whether an agreement is against public policy, the court looks for a tendency in the

agreement to be injurious to the public good. Lawrence v. CDB Servs., Inc., 44 S.W.3d 544, 557

(Tex. 2001); Sacks v. Dallas Gold & Silver Exch., 720 S.W.2d 177, 180 (Tex. App.--Dallas 1986,

no writ).

        The mediated settlement agreement stated:

        Each party will be required to post $100,000 before any new suit may be initiated
        against the other party or their respective spouses or family members, and that
        $50,000 of said money shall be immediately disbursed to the party who has not
        brought the new cause of action.

        The $100,000 sum shall not be required to be paid in the event that one of the parties
        is required to file an enforcement action.

 The trial court’s final order added exceptions to the litigation-deposit requirement not found in the

 mediated settlement agreement. The order provided:

         IT IS ORDERED that a party bringing suit against the other party or their respectave
         spouses or family members will be required to post $100,000.00 before any new suit,
         other than a suit brought to enforce the terms of this Order or an emergency suit
         alleging imminent danger of a child, may be initiated. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED
         that $50,000.00 of said money shall be immediately disbursed to the party who has
         not brought the new cause of action and the balance placed in the registry of the
            Court.

            IT IS ORDERED that the parties will be exempt from the requirement to post
       $100,000 as dictated above for the following:

                (1) If either party files for one report back hearing in December 2010;

                (2) The first time [Mother] files a Motion to Modify Child Support and
                Medical Reimbursement;

                (3) if either party files suit to appoint a parenting facilitator, as this issue was
                reserved for further review by the Court.

        Mother argues the litigation-deposit requirement violates public policy because it

"discourages the parties from filing suit where the safety or welfare and best interest of the children

are at issue." We disagree with this argument for three reasons. First, the litigation-deposit

requirement does not apply to "an emergency suit alleging imminent danger of a child." Second, the

Family Code’s provisions permitting the trial court to award the parties their costs and attorney’s fees

may tend to discourage parties from bringing suit, yet those provisions have never been held to

violate public policy. See TEX. FAM. CODE ANN: §§ 106.001, .002 (West 2008). And third, Mother

has not shown the litigation-deposit requirement would discourage her or Father from bringing suit

where the safety, welfare, or best interest of the children were at ~ssue.

        The litigation-deposit requirement is an agreement to provide the opposing party with a fund

to pay its attorney’s fees and costs while defending the suit instead of the party having to wait until

the end of the litigation to obtain an order for the payment of costs and attorney’s fees. Mother does

not explain why the litigation-deposit requirement violates public policy when orders to pay costs

and attorney’s fees do not violate public policy. Nothing in the agreement or the trial court’s final

order prohibits the court in subsequent suits from ordering the litigation deposit returned to the

parent bringing the suit and ordering the other parent to pay the costs and attorney’s fees of the

parent bringing suit.

        Mother argues it cannot be good public policy to require a parent to wait until a child is in
imminent danger of serious harm before she may file suit. The litigation-deposit requirement does

not require the parent to wait to file suit until an exception to the litigation deposit arises. However,

Mother argues that having to wait to file suit is the result of the litigation-deposit requirement when

the parent does not have the money available or "where the amount required is substantial, like the

$100,000 required under the MSA here." However, the record does not show that Mother lacks the

money to make the deposit)° Mother did not testify or present other evidence that the litigation-

deposit requirement would discourage her from posting the money and filing suit if she believed the

safety, welfare, and best interest of the children were at issue.

          In cases where the parents have repeatedly litigated almost all aspects of their parental

relationship, with the enormous expenditure of resources that entails, the parents’ decision to impose

litigation restrictions on themselves that discourages further litigation but does not close the

courthouse to the parties may well be in the best interest of the children. The record in this case

shows the parties have each spent many hundreds of thousands of dollars litigating conservatorship

and possession of the children since they filed for divorce in 2003, and both parties have been

ordered at different times to pay the other side’s attorney’s fees. Nothing in the record shows that

the litigation-deposit requirement would prevent either party from bringing suit in the future. If the

requirement will encourage the parties to resolve their differences between themselves, rather than

resorting to litigation to resolve all their differences, without effectively preventing the parties from

filing suit when necessary, then the litigation-deposit requirement may promote the children’s best

interest.

           We conclude Mother has not shown the litigation-deposit requirement violates public

     tO in a heating on a motion to sign temporary order, Mother testifiod that, before she met her cul’ttmt husband, she had to sell her house and
 liquidate he~ retirement savings to pay her litigation expenses. At the time of triaL, Mother and her husband had been marfled about a month. The
 record of the trial contains no evidence of Mother’s financial r~urces at the time of trial..
policy.

             DEVIATION FROM THE MEDIATED SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT

          In her fourth issue, Mother contends the trial court abused its discretion by entering a final

order that deviated from and changed provisions in the mediated settlement agreement. Mother

asserts the final order varies from the agreement by (1) not including an order that Stacy pay the

$250,000, (2) not appointing a parenting facilitator, (3) deleting Father’s continuing obligation to

fund an education account, and (4) changing the language regarding the litigation deposit.

                            Lack of an Order Requiring Stacy to Pay the $250,000

          As discussed above, the agreement did not reqmre entry of an order that Stacy pay the

$250,000, and, because Stacy was not a party, the trial court lacked authority to enter such an order.

See Schlueter, 112 S.W.3d at 172. Mother has not argued that Stacy became a party to the litigation

by her signing the mediated settlement agreement. The final order did not vary from the mediated

settlement agreement by omitting an order that Stacy pay the $250,000.

                                  Lack of Appointment of a Parenting Facilitator

          The mediated settlement agreement provided, "A Parenting Facilitator will be appointed to

assist the parties in resolving future disputes concerning the children .... Dr. Alexandra Doyle shall

serve as a Parenting Facilitator." The mediator’s determination and clarification of the agreement

provided, "Any parenting facilitator acting under the MSA... shall serve as long as the court deems

it necessary or further agreement of the parties." The final order did not appoint a facilitator but

stated the $100,000 litigation deposit would not apply"ifeither party files suit to appoint a parenting

facilitator, as this issue was reserved for further review by the Court." Subsequently, the trial court

    I I Wbethe~ a litigation-deposit requirement might violate public policy under other circumstances, such as where one or bo~ parties lack the
resources to pay the deposit, is not before us, and we make no dete~aination of that issue.

                                                                     -25-
appointed a parenting facilitator. Accordingly, any abuse of discretion by the trial court for failing

to appoint a parenting facilitator is now moot.

                 Deleting Father’s Obligation to Fund the Education Account

       Mother argues the final order varies from the mediated settlement agreement because the

order provides that Father’s payment of the children’s Fairhill School expenses "extinguishes the

Father’s obligation to pay the $30,000.00 Educational Fund each year."

       The 2006 order required Father to "[f]und $30,000 in an education account each year for the

children’s education" until the children graduate from high school. The mediated settlement

agreement provided, "The children shall remain enrolled in Fairhill School[.] Father shall pay all

expenses for [the] children in attending Fairhill School." The mediator determined and clarified this

part of the agreement, stating, "The Father shall pay all expenses for the children in attending Fairhill

School until further order of the court or further agreement of the parties. Thepayment of the Fairhill.

School expenses extinguishes the Father[’]s obligation to pay the $30,000.00.Educational Fund each

year effective December 5, 2009."

        Mother argues there was no basis for the mediator’s conclusions because the mediated

settlement agreement is silent as to the educational fund; the mediator’s interpretation improperly

added to and changed the terms of the agreement; and if the parties had intended to eliminate the

education account, they would have put such a provision in the mediated settlement agreement.

        The 2006 order gave Mother the exclusive right to make decisions concerning the children’s

education. Their education would then be funded by the education account Father would annually

 fund with $30,000, with Mother having sole discretion how to spend the education account. Under

 the mediated settlement agreement, Mother lost the exclusive right to determine the children’s

 education because the agreement provided that the children would remain enrolled at Fairhill School.
At the trial of this case, and before the mediator issued the clarification of the agreement, Father

testified he believed the education account, and his duty to contribute $30,000 annually into the

account, were eliminated by the agreement’s requirement that he pay the costs for the children to

attend the Fairhill School. Mother testified that the mediated settlement agreement did not resolve

the education account. Pursuantto the agreement, the trial court turned over the dispute to the

mediator.

       Under the facts of this case, the mediator could reasonably conclude that the purpose of the

account, to provide Mother with the funds to send the children to the education institution she

desired, terminated when Mother lost the exclusive fight to decide the children’s educatio~ when

the parties agreed to continue the children at the Fairhill School, and when Father agreed to pay the

costs for the children to attend the school. Even though the agreement does not mention the

education fund, the mediator’s determination was reasonable and did not add.to or change the terms

of the agreement.

        Mother also argues the trial court’s finding of fact that Father’s payment of the children’s

expenses for attendance at Fairhill School extinguished his obligation to pay into the education

account was unsupported by the evidence. This finding was supported by Father’s testimony that

the agreement extinguished the education-account obligation and by the mediator’s determination

and clarification of the agreement, which was admitted into evidence.

        We conclude the final order did not vary from the mediated settlement agreement by

providing that Father’s payment of the Fairhill School expenses extinguished his obligation to pay

 into the education account.

                                         Litigation Deposit

        Mother asserts the final order’s provisions concerning the litigation deposit for subsequent
suits varies from the terms of the mediated settlement agreement. In the agreement, the only

exception to posting $100,000 before bringing a new suit was "in the event that one of the parties

is required to file an enforcement action." The mediator did not provide clarification or

determination of this provision. The final order included the exception for enforcement actions as

well as exceptions for (1) an emergency smt alleging imminent danger of a child; (2) a filing "for

one report back hearing in December 2010";~2 (3) Mother’s first motion to modify child support; and

(4) if either party files suit to appoint a parentmg facilitator.

            Even if the trial court did abuse its discretion by including exceptions to the litigation-deposit

requirement that were not included in the mediated settlement agreement, we do not reverse unless

the error complained of harmed the party. -See G & H Towing Co. v. Magee, 347 S.W.3d 293,297

(Tex. 2011).

         ¯ . The harmless error rule states that before reversing a judgment because of-an error
            of law, the reviewing court must fred that the error amounted to such a denial of the
            appellant’s rights as was reasonably calculated to cause and probably did cause "the
            rendition of an improper judgment," or that the error "probably prevented the
            appellant from properly presenting the case [on appeal]."

Id. In this case, Mother presents no argument that the added exceptions to the litigation-deposit

requirement harmed her, and we fail to see how any of the extra exceptions denied Mother’s rights.

All of the exceptions permitted Mother the opportunity to bring suit in certain conditions without

the necessity of first posting $100,000. We conclude any error in deviating from the mediated

settlement agreement was harmless. We overrule Mother’s fourth issue.

     12 The trial court stated the purpose ofthe "’report back" hearing was to permit the court to consider whether the children should remain era’oiled
 at Fairhill School following the fi~t semester after the court’s final order. The record do~s not show whethe~ either party filed for the "ret~ort back"
 hearing. Father states in his appellee’s brief, without citation to the re~ord, that neither party filed for the report back heating. Because the
 litigation-del~sit requiremmat required the parties to post the S iO0,000 before bringing suit, and the .final. order required .the parti~ to ,file for a .r~po,rt
 back hem’ing in December 2010, mote than two yea~ ago, the propriety of the exception to the litagatton-depos~t requtremmt tor me report back
 hearing is now moot.
                                        CHILD SUPPORT

       In her eighth issue, Mother contends the trial court erred by imposing a monthly child support

obligation when no evidence of Mother’s income was introduced at trial. The trial court found

Mother’s monthly net resources to be $5,332.86 and ordered her to pay child support of twenty-five

percent of that amount, $1,333.22 per month.

       We review a trial court’s order on child support for an abuse of discretion. In reJ.G.L., 295
S.W.3d 424, 426 (Tex. App.--Dallas 2009, no pet.). Abuse of discretion occurs when a trial court

acts in an "arbitrary and unreasonable manner" or "without reference to any guiding rules or

principles." Downer v. Aquamarine Operators, Inc., 701 S.W.2d 238, 241-42 (Tex. 1985). We

cannot presume the trial court’s judgment to be arbitrary or unreasonable if it is supported with

evidence of a "substantive and probative character." In re K.N.C., 276 S.W.3d 624, 626 (Tex.

App.--Dallas 2008, no pet.). When the abuse of discretion standard applies, complaints about the

legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence are not independent grounds for asserting-error;

however, they are relevant factors in determining whether the award is arbitrary or unreasonable.

In re J.G.L., 295 S.W.3d at 427. In determining legal sufficiency, we consider all the evidence,

crediting evidence in support of the verdict if reasonable jurors could, and disregarding evidence

contrary to the verdict unless reasonable jurors could not. City of Keller v. Wilson, 168 S.W.3d 802,

823,827 (Tex. 2005); Morris v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., 334 S.W.3d 838, 842 (Tex. App.--Dallas

2011, no pet.). If there is more than a scintilla of evidence to support the finding, the evidence is

legally sufficient. Formosa Plastics Corp. USA v. Presidio Eng’rs & Contractors, Inc., 960 S.W.2d

41,48 (Tex. 1998). When the evidence offered to prove a vital fact is so weak as to do no more than

 create a mere surmise or suspicion of its existence, the evidence is no more than a scintilla and, in

 legal effect, is no evidence. Kindred v. Con/Chem, Inc., 650 S.W.2d 61, 63 (Tex. 1983). ffthe
evidence furnishes a reasonable basis for differing conclusions by reasonable minds as to the

existence of a vital fact, then there is legally sufficient evidence, more than a scintilla, to support the

fact. Id.

        Mother testified during the trial that she was self-employed, but neither side introduced

evidence during the trial of her earnings. Nor was there any other evidence of Mother’s net

resources. After the trial, during a hearing on the entry of the court’s final order, Father told the

court that Mother had previously testified at a hearing on a motion for the court to sign temporary

orders that she earned "[a]bout 100,000 a year." Father argues the trial court did not abuse its

discretion m using evidence during a pretrial hearing when Mother testified to her income.

        The trial court may not judicially notice testimony from a prior hearing on a temporary order

unless such testimony is properly admitted into evidence. In re J. C., 346 S.W.3d 189, 192-93 (Tex..

App.--Houston [14th Dist.] 2011, no pet,). In order for testimony from a prior hearing or trial.to

be considered in a subsequent proceeding, the transcript of that-testimony must be properly

authenticated and entered into evidence. Guyton v. Monteau, 332 S.W.3d 687, 693 (Tex.

App.--Houston [14th Dist.] 2011, no pet.). The transcript of Mother’s testmaony at the pretrial

hearing was not authenticated and offered into evidence at the trial. Accordingly, it was not evidence

that could be considered by the court for ordering Mother to pay child support. See In re J. C., 346
S.W.3d at 192-93; Guyton, 332 S.W.3d at 693.

            Because there was no evidence to support the trial court’s findings concerning Mother’s net

resources, we conclude the trial court abused its discretion in ordering Mother to pay child support

of $1,333.22 per month. We sustain Mother’s eighth issue.

                                             CONCLUSION

            We reverse the trial court’s judgment as to the order that Mother pay child support of
$1,333.22 per month. We remand the cause to the trial court for determination of the amount of

child support, if any, to be paid. In all other respects, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

                                                        JUSTICE

101375F.P05

                                                  -31-
                                      JUDGMENT
IN THE INTEREST OF C.H.C. AND S.M.C.,              Appeal from the 380th District Court of Collin
CHILDREN                                           County, Texas. (Tr.Ct.No. 380-54606-03).
                                                   Opinion delivered by Justice Myers, Justices
No. 05-10-01375-CV                                 Moseley and Fillmore participating.

        Based on the Court’s opinion of this date, the judgment of the trial court is REVERSED in
part and AFFIRMED in part as follows: We REVERSE the trial court’s judgment as to the order
that appellant, Jennifer Cary, pay child support of $1,333.22 per month, and we REMAND the cause
for further proceedings on the amount of child support, if any, to be paid. In all other respects, we
AFFIRM the trial court’s judgment. We ORDER that the parties each bear th.eir own costs of this
appeal.

Judgment entered January 3, 2013.

                                                  LANA MYERS
                                                  JUSTICE