Court Opinion

ID: 2958985
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-09-17 03:10:07.958183+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:42:14.052892
License: Public Domain

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

                                       NO. 03-13-00778-CV

                               In re Magdalena Aitken Bromberg

                  ORIGINAL PROCEEDING FROM WILLIAMSON COUNTY

                             MEMORANDUM OPINION

               Relator Magdalena Aitken Bromberg has filed a petition for writ of mandamus

complaining of the trial court’s Temporary Orders In Suit To Modify Parent-Child Relationship.

We conditionally grant mandamus relief in part and deny in part.

                                            Background

               Bromberg and real party in interest Kelly Schernik are the parents of E., who in June

2013 was five and one-half years old. In 2009, the trial court signed an order giving each parent two

consecutive week days of possession and alternating weekend possession and providing that during

the time each parent has possession of E., that parent has the right to designate her primary residence

within Williamson County. Bromberg got married in late 2012, and in 2013, she filed a petition to

modify the 2009 order, seeking the exclusive right to designate E.’s primary residence.1 Schernik

       1
          Bromberg’s new husband inherited a house in Wimberley and they want to move with E.
to live there. In the June 2013 hearing on the parties’ motions to modify, Bromberg’s husband
explained that they had moved with E. to Wimberley in November 2012 and had enrolled her in a
private school in south Austin. They wanted E. to continue to attend that school for one more year,
through kindergarten, and then later attend a different private school. Bromberg’s mother had
offered to drive E. between school and Schernik’s house in Round Rock. Schernik wanted E. to
attend the public elementary school near his house, saying that part of the reason he decided to live
where he did was that the school was very highly rated.
responded with a counter-petition, also seeking the exclusive right to designate the child’s primary

residence. Neither Bromberg nor Schernik alleged that present circumstances might significantly

impair E.’s physical or emotional well-being. The trial court held a hearing and later signed a

temporary order naming Bromberg and Schernik as joint managing conservators, ordering Bromberg

to pay Schernik $300 a month in child support, and including the standard possession order set out

in the family code.2 See Tex. Fam. Code §§ 153.311-.317. During each parent’s time of possession,

that parent has the exclusive right to designate the child’s primary residence within Williamson

County.3 Bromberg then filed this petition for writ of mandamus relief.4

       2
          As long as they live within 100 miles of each other, Bromberg has possession of the child
on alternating weekends, on Thursday nights during the school year, and during certain holidays and
vacation terms; Schernik has possession the rest of the time.
       3
         At the conclusion of the June 2013 hearing, the trial court said that Bromberg should have
asked for permission to move rather than moving and “ask[ing] for forgiveness.” The court said,
“I’m ordering a joint managing conservatorship. The father will determine domicile within the
confines of Williamson County only. The school district will be determined by his residence. He
will be paid $300 a month in child support. . . . [Bromberg will] have expanded visitation.”

        In an October 2013 hearing on Bromberg’s motion to reconsider, Bromberg’s attorney
stated that Bromberg had moved back to Williamson County and asked whether the court would
reinstate its 2009 order. The court said that Bromberg’s move “might give rise to another hearing”
and that it wanted to proceed to a final hearing as soon as possible. The court also stated that
Bromberg’s moving without permission “really tied the Court’s hands” and explained that it gave
Schernik the ability to establish E.’s domicile because of Bromberg’s “precipitous actions,” which
had “the potential of serious emotional consequences for the child based on the circumstances and
suddenness of the move.” The court said that since Bromberg had moved to Williamson County,
it would limit the child’s domicile to Williamson County, allow the school district to be determined
by Schernik, and put the parents on a standard possession schedule.

       The written order mirrors those declarations, giving the parents joint managing conservatorship
under a standard schedule, allowing each parent to determine E.’s primary residence during their
periods of possession, limited to Williamson County, and providing that the school district will be
determined by Schernik’s residence.
       4
           We requested a response from Schernik, but none has been filed. See Tex. R. App. P. 52.4.

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                                              Discussion

                Bromberg first asserts that the trial court had erred in changing the designation of the

person with the exclusive right to designate the child’s primary residence without requiring proof

that the change was in the child’s best interest and that the child’s present circumstances significantly

impair her physical health or emotional development. Id. § 156.006. We disagree.

                A trial court may render temporary orders in a suit for modification, but it may not

render an order “that has the effect of changing the designation of the person who has the exclusive

right to designate the primary residence of the child” unless such a change is necessary because

current circumstances would significantly impair the child’s emotional or physical well-being. Id.

§ 156.006. The temporary order in this case modified the schedule of possession but did not change

the designation of “the person who has the exclusive right” to designate E.’s primary residence.

                As was the case under the 2009 order, both parents have the right to determine E.’s

primary residence during their period of possession, as long as they stay within Williamson County.

The order only modifies the schedule under which the parents exercise their visitations and

links E.’s school district to Schernik’s residence; it does not change the designation of the person

who has the exclusive right to determine E.’s primary residence. Bromberg has not shown her

entitlement to mandamus relief from the temporary order’s provisions related to visitation and

determination of domicile.

                In her second issue, Bromberg argues that the court erred in ordering her to pay child

support because there was no evidence of her available resources or that the order was necessary for

the child’s safety and welfare. See id. § 105.001(a). We agree.

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                In making temporary orders, the court may provide for temporary support “for the

safety and welfare of the child,” id. § 105.001, and in determining whether to order child support,

the court should calculate a parent’s net resources as set out in the family code. See id. §§ 154.061,

.062, .069, .123, .125. In this case, there was no evidence that Bromberg has any net resources from

which she can pay child support. There was evidence about her husband’s income and sums he was

paying for E.’s schooling and healthcare, but a spouse’s income is not to be considered when

calculating a parent’s child support obligation. Id. § 154.069(a). We sustain Bromberg’s second

issue on appeal.

                                            Conclusion

                We have overruled Bromberg’s attack on the possession and domicile provisions of

the temporary orders. We sustain her issue related to the $300 monthly child support obligation.

The trial court is instructed to vacate the provision in the temporary orders imposing a child support

obligation on Bromberg. The writ will issue only if the trial court does not act in accordance with

this opinion.

                                               __________________________________________

                                               David Puryear, Justice

Before Justices Puryear, Goodwin, and Field

Filed: January 14, 2014

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