Court Opinion

ID: 4648698
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-01-04 08:15:40.072357+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:01:17.837069
License: Public Domain

Opinion issued December 29, 2020

                                      In The

                               Court of Appeals
                                     For The

                          First District of Texas
                             ————————————
                              NO. 01-19-00296-CV
                            ———————————
                         HECTOR CORTEZ, Appellant
                                        V.
                   VERONICA GARZA CORTEZ, Appellee

                    On Appeal from the 505th District Court
                           Fort Bend County, Texas
                     Trial Court Case No. 12-DCV-199184

                                  OPINION

      This is a suit affecting the parent-child relationship (SAPCR). Appellant,

Hector Cortez, and appellee, Veronica Garza Cortez, were divorced in 2013, and the

divorce decree required that the primary residence of their minor children was to be
in Fort Bend County, Texas, as of August 1, 2014. In 2015, Hector filed a motion

for enforcement of the divorce decree, seeking an order that Veronica return the

children from where they had been living with her in Mexico, and a motion to modify

the parent-child relationship to grant Hector the right to designate the primary

residence of the children. The trial court declined to exercise jurisdiction under the

Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Enforcement Act (UCCJEA). In five issues,

Hector argues that (1) the trial court failed to correctly construe the “home state”

provision of the UCCJEA; (2) the trial court erred by not concluding that Texas had

initial child custody jurisdiction; (3)–(4) the trial court erred by concluding that

Texas had lost continuing exclusive jurisdiction, a conclusion that was not supported

by the record; and (5) the trial court abused its discretion when it declined to hear

Hector’s motion for enforcement of the geographical restriction.

      We affirm.

                                    Background

      Hector and Veronica married in 2001 and had two children: a son born in 2004

and a son born in 2009. Both children were born in Texas.

      In June 2012, Hector filed for divorce in Fort Bend County, Texas. In August

2012, Veronica and the children moved to Monterrey, Mexico. On January 22, 2013,

the trial court signed an agreed final divorce decree. The agreed divorce decree

named Hector and Veronica as joint managing conservators of the children and

                                          2
granted Veronica the exclusive right to designate the primary residence of the

children, “subject to the geographic restrictions as stated more particularly herein.”

The decree included the following provision:

      IT IS ORDERED that the primary residence of the children shall be
      Fort Bend County, Texas beginning on August 1, 2014. The parties
      acknowledge and agree that the children are currently living in
      Monter[r]ey, Mexico with Veronica Garza De Cortez. The parties have
      further agreed and IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that the children
      shall return to Fort Bend County, Texas to live on or before August 1,
      2014. Veronica Garza De Cortez is ORDERED to return the children
      to Fort Bend County, Texas on or before August 1, 2014 for the purpose
      of designating the permanent residence of the children in Fort Bend
      County, Texas for all times thereafter. Beginning August 1, 2014 the
      parties shall not remove the children from Fort Bend County, Texas for
      the purpose of changing the primary residence of the children until
      modified by further order of the court of continuing jurisdiction or by
      written agreement signed by the parties and filed with the court.

The decree stated that the “Home State” of both children was Texas. The decree also

included a Standard Possession Order addressing Hector’s periods of possession of

the children, including provisions for extended periods of possession during the

summer. The agreed divorce decree obligated Hector to pay child support and

contractual alimony, and it obligated him to pay for health insurance coverage for

the children.

      On April 21, 2015, Hector filed a petition to modify the parent-child

relationship in the Fort Bend County court. This petition recited that the court had

“continuing, exclusive jurisdiction,” stated that the children’s “County of residence”

was Fort Bend County, and stated that Veronica was a “nonresident of Texas.” In
                                          3
this filing, Hector stated his belief that the parties would enter into an agreement

concerning modification of possession of and access to the children and modification

of child support requirements. Hector requested that the trial court make a finding

concerning whether a risk of international child abduction by Veronica existed, and

he requested that the trial court enter several temporary orders, including an order

granting him the exclusive right to designate the primary residence of the children,

restricting the residence of the children to Fort Bend County, enjoining Veronica

from removing the children from a designated geographic area, and requiring

Veronica to surrender the children’s passports. The trial court signed temporary

orders but did not make a finding concerning the risk of international child

abduction.

      That same day, Hector filed a “Motion for Enforcement of Possession or

Access.” In this motion, Hector alleged that Veronica had failed to comply with the

agreed divorce decree, specifically, the provisions requiring her to return to Fort

Bend County with the children by August 1, 2014, and to establish the children’s

primary residence within Fort Bend County. Hector alleged that Veronica had also

failed to comply with the agreed divorce decree “by failing to surrender the children”

to him on two or more occasions. He filed a supporting affidavit in which he averred

that Veronica had not returned to Fort Bend County “even for a short period of time,”

and as a result, he had not seen his children “in over a year.” He requested that the

                                          4
trial court hold Veronica in contempt and that he be allowed additional periods of

possession “to compensate for those periods denied by [Veronica].” The trial court

ordered Veronica to appear before the court and respond to Hector’s motion.

      In response to Hector’s motions, Veronica filed a plea to the jurisdiction, a

request for the trial court to decline jurisdiction under the UCCJEA, and an original

answer. Veronica alleged that the court no longer had continuing exclusive

jurisdiction because neither the children nor Veronica had a significant connection

to Texas and there was no substantial evidence in Texas concerning the children’s

care, protection, training, and personal relationships. She argued that Mexico was

the children’s “home state,” that Texas did not have jurisdiction to make an initial

child custody determination, that Texas did not have emergency jurisdiction over the

children, and that the court, therefore, lacked the power to modify the agreed divorce

decree. She further argued that, if the court found that it did have continuing

exclusive jurisdiction, the court should decline to exercise its jurisdiction because

Texas is an inconvenient forum, and Monterrey, Mexico, is a more appropriate

forum. Veronica also filed a counter-petition to modify the agreed divorce decree,

subject to her plea to the jurisdiction. In this counter-petition, Veronica requested,

among other things, “that the residence of the children be restricted to no lesser area

than the state of Texas and Monterrey, Mexico.”

                                          5
      Veronica attached an affidavit to her counter-petition to modify. She averred

that she and the children had lived in Monterrey, Mexico, since September 2012,

and that they moved there at Hector’s request after he had filed for divorce. She

averred that the last time Hector had seen the children in person was in Texas in

January 2013 when the divorce decree was signed and that he had not visited them

in Mexico because he told her that he had “some issue with his passport.” She also

averred that Hector travels extensively for work—sometimes up to three weeks per

month—and he occasionally travels outside of the United States. Veronica stated

that Hector’s mother lived close by in Monterrey, but she rarely saw the children,

even though Veronica invited her to family events. She averred that Hector rarely

answers when she calls him and that he primarily communicates with the children

through their gaming console. She averred that, at the time Hector filed his

modification petition, Hector had not spoken with the children in three months.

      Veronica averred that Hector had only sent the children Christmas presents

once in over two years and that he had never sent any birthday presents. She stated

that after she and the children moved to Monterrey in September 2012, Hector had

never requested that she bring the children to the airport for any possession periods

until he emailed her with a request in June 2015 to spend the month of July 2015

with the children in Houston. Veronica agreed, but Hector never responded to

confirm travel arrangements.

                                          6
      Veronica also averred that she had since remarried and she had been pregnant

during the summer of 2014, when she was supposed to move back to Fort Bend

County, as provided for in the divorce decree. Veronica had medical complications

during this pregnancy, and she averred that she discussed those problems with

Hector and that he agreed she and the children did not have to move back to Texas,

but could stay in Mexico through 2014. Veronica averred that she was currently

pregnant but again had health complications and could not fly to Texas for court

proceedings. She further averred that Hector had stopped paying his spousal

maintenance payments and had removed the children from his health insurance. She

stated that the children were covered through her husband’s health insurance, but

they would lose that coverage if they moved to the United States, as would her

husband, who has a brain tumor. She stated that the children attend a “very reputable

private school” in Monterrey free of charge because she works there. Veronica

averred that removing the children from her care would present a danger to the

children’s “emotional health, safety and welfare and mental well-being,” noting that

they had not spent any time with Hector in over two years and that Hector travels

frequently for his job.

      In February 2016, while his earlier-filed motions were still pending before the

trial court, Hector filed a “Motion for Determination of Wrongful Retention.” In this

motion, Hector stated that he intended to file an application for return of the children

                                           7
from Mexico pursuant to the Hague Convention on Civil Aspects of International

Child Abduction (Hague Convention) and the federal International Child Abduction

Remedies Act (ICARA). Hector argued that the children’s habitual residence was

Texas: the children were born in Texas and they lived in Texas until August 2012,

when Veronica moved with the children to Monterrey. Hector argued that he and

Veronica intended for the children to live in Mexico on a temporary basis, and he

did not agree to “the permanent change of residence of the children from Texas to

Mexico.” Hector argued that he had rights of custody to the children pursuant to the

agreed divorce decree, which named him as a joint managing conservator and

awarded him possession rights under a Standard Possession Order. He further argued

that he was exercising his custody rights at the time of the children’s removal from

Texas “and would continue to be exercising those rights but for [Veronica’s]

retention of the children in Mexico and interference with [Hector’s] maintaining

contact with them.” Hector argued that the trial court retained continuing exclusive

jurisdiction over the children, and he requested that the court determine that

Veronica had wrongfully removed the children from Texas, their habitual residence,

and had wrongfully retained the children in Mexico in violation of the agreed divorce

decree.

      In March 2016, Veronica filed suit in Mexico seeking termination of Hector’s

parental rights to the children. Veronica alleged that the parties agreed, in the agreed

                                           8
divorce decree, that she would establish her domicile in Monterrey. She also alleged

that Hector agreed that he would pay travel expenses for the children’s visitation and

that he would include the children on his health insurance, but he did not comply

with either requirement. She alleged that, after the divorce, Hector had not seen the

children or had parenting time with them and that he had abandoned the children.

She therefore sought termination of Hector’s parental rights.1 In this petition,

Veronica did not make any allegations that Hector had engaged in domestic violence

against her or against the children, and there is no evidence of domestic violence in

the appellate record.

      In Mexico, Hector filed an application for return of the children under the

Hague Convention in May 2016. The presiding judge in that proceeding ordered

Hector to inquire if the Fort Bend County trial court would issue a determination on

whether the removal or retention of the children was wrongful, as it was allowed to

do before the Mexican court ruled on the merits of the Hague Convention

proceeding. At Hector’s request, the Fort Bend trial court agreed to make this

1
      In filings in the trial court, Hector asserted that this proceeding in Mexico was
      dismissed on June 22, 2018. The appellate record contains a copy of Veronica’s
      original petition and an order transferring venue to another court in Mexico, but it
      does not contain an order or judgment dismissing the proceeding. The record does
      contain an email exchange between the trial court and the Mexican court which
      includes an email from the judge of the Mexican court that references June 22, 2018,
      but this email is in Spanish and no English translation of this email is contained in
      the record.
                                            9
determination. On December 6, 2016, the Fort Bend trial court determined that “the

retention of the children in Mexico by their mother, Respondent Veronica Garza, on

August 1, 2014, breached the child custody rights of Hector Xavier Cortez, pursuant

to the [Hague] Convention Article 3.” The appellate record does not indicate that the

proceeding under the Hague Convention in Mexico has been resolved. The record

contains evidence reflecting that Veronica filed an “amparo” proceeding in Mexico

in December 2016 that had the effect of staying resolution of the Hague Convention

proceeding.

      However, on August 21, 2018, the Fort Bend trial court issued a ruling

declining to exercise jurisdiction over the case. Hector filed a motion for

reconsideration of this ruling, arguing that the trial court had abused its discretion

by declining jurisdiction and that it had erred in finding that Texas was an

inconvenient forum because Veronica had engaged in unjustifiable conduct to create

jurisdiction in Mexico.

      On November 20, 2018, the Fort Bend trial court signed an order informing

the parties and the court in Mexico hearing Veronica’s suit against Hector that it

declined jurisdiction “as it pertains to modification of the Parent-Child Relationship,

further defined as possession and access, rights and duties and conservatorship,” but

that it retained jurisdiction “as to matters pertaining to child support enforcement

                                          10
and modification.”2 This order stated, “Jurisdiction concerning the enforcement of

possession and access is under advisement.” Hector filed a motion for

reconsideration of this order as well.

      The Fort Bend trial court signed another order declining jurisdiction over the

case—but retaining jurisdiction over child support matters—on April 10, 2019. This

order cited Texas Family Code section 152.202(a)(1) as the basis for declining

jurisdiction. The court issued findings of fact and conclusions of law in support of

its rulings. The Fort Bend trial court found, among other findings, that Veronica and

the children had moved to Mexico in September 2012 and had lived there

continuously ever since; that Veronica and Hector had agreed that the children could

continue to live in Mexico until August 1, 2014, and that the trial court had ordered

the children to return by that date; Hector had attempted to exercise visitation at least

seven times from 2013 through 2017, but this “was not facilitated by” Veronica;

Hector had “maintained a relationship with the children before, during and after the

[d]ivorce proceedings”;3 and the trial court had previously found that Veronica’s

2
      At the hearing on the entry of this order, the trial court stated, “I’m not calling
      witnesses from Mexico to come here and testify. That’s why I’ve declined
      jurisdiction. . . . They’ve been there a long time.”
3
      With respect to the findings that Veronica did not facilitate Hector’s attempts at
      exercising visitation and that Hector maintained a relationship with the children, the
      trial court expressly stated that these findings were based on evidence Hector
      attached to a brief in support of the trial court’s retention of jurisdiction, specifically,
      email exchanges between Hector and Veronica, and pictures of Hector with the
      children before the divorce and on two court-ordered periods of visitation that
                                              11
retention of the children in Mexico after August 1, 2014, breached Hector’s custody

rights under the agreed divorce decree. The court concluded that “neither the

child[ren], nor the child[ren] and one parent, nor the child[ren] and a person acting

as a parent, have a significant connection with this state and that substantial evidence

is no longer available in the state concerning the child[ren’s] care, protection,

training and personal relationships.”

      This appeal followed.

                          Jurisdiction Under the UCCJEA

      In five issues on appeal, Hector challenges the trial court’s orders ruling that

it does not have exclusive continuing jurisdiction over Hector’s modification and

enforcement petitions. In his first two issues, Hector contends that the trial court did

not correctly construe the “home state” provision and erroneously concluded that

Texas did not have jurisdiction to make an initial child custody determination. In his

third and fourth issues, he contends that the trial court erred by concluding that it

lacked exclusive continuing jurisdiction because this conclusion was not supported

by evidence in the record. Finally, in his fifth issue, Hector argues that the trial court

erred by not hearing his motion for enforcement of the geographical restriction

contained in the agreed divorce decree. As part of this issue, Hector argues that the

      occurred in 2016. The record also included evidence that Veronica sent the children
      to Texas for court-ordered visitation with Hector on two occasions: for a week in
      March–April 2016 and for a month during the summer of 2016.
                                           12
trial court erred to the extent it declined jurisdiction because Texas was an

inconvenient forum.

A.    Standard of Review and Governing Law

      Whether a trial court has jurisdiction under the UCCJEA is a matter of subject-

matter jurisdiction. In re Salminen, 492 S.W.3d 31, 38 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st

Dist.] 2016, orig. proceeding) (“Subject matter jurisdiction in child custody matters

is determined by reference to the UCCJEA, set out in Family Code Chapter 152.”);

Waltenburg v. Waltenburg, 270 S.W.3d 308, 313 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2008, no pet.)

(stating that UCCJEA is “exclusive jurisdictional basis for making a child custody

determination by a court of this state”). Whether a trial court has subject-matter

jurisdiction is a question of law that we review de novo. Salminen, 492 S.W.3d at

38; In re Burk, 252 S.W.3d 736, 739 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2008, orig.

proceeding [mand. denied]). The party seeking to invoke the trial court’s jurisdiction

has the burden to allege facts that affirmatively demonstrate the court’s authority to

hear the case. Seligman-Hargis v. Hargis, 186 S.W.3d 582, 585 (Tex. App.—Dallas

2006, no pet.). We construe the pleadings in favor of the party invoking jurisdiction

and consider relevant evidence when necessary to resolve the jurisdictional issue.
Id.

      In 1999, Texas adopted the UCCJEA, which “was designed, in large part, to

clarify and to unify the standards for courts’ continuing and modification jurisdiction

                                          13
in interstate child-custody matters.” In re Forlenza, 140 S.W.3d 373, 374 (Tex.

2004) (orig. proceeding). The UCCJEA “specifically grants exclusive continuing

jurisdiction over child-custody disputes to the state that made the initial custody

determination and provides specific rules on how long this jurisdiction continues.”
Id. at 375; In re Isquierdo, 426 S.W.3d 128, 131 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.]

2012, orig. proceeding). The UCCJEA also contains rules preventing another state

from modifying a child-custody determination while the state that made the original

determination retains exclusive continuing jurisdiction. Forlenza, 140 S.W.3d at

375; Hart v. Kozik, 242 S.W.3d 102, 106–07 (Tex. App.—Eastland 2007, no pet.)

(stating that UCCJEA’s “overarching purposes are to prevent conflicting

jurisdiction, relitigation of child custody issues, and deter child abduction,” and, to

that end, statute limits authority to make custody determinations to one court, even

though multiple states might have legitimate interest in parent-child relationship at

issue). For purposes of the UCCJEA, a foreign country is treated as if it were a state

of the United States. TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 152.105(a).

      Under the UCCJEA, a Texas court has jurisdiction to make an initial child

custody determination in four situations, including, as relevant here, if

      this state is the home state of the child on the date of the commencement
      of the proceeding, or was the home state of the child within six months
      before the commencement of the proceeding and the child is absent
      from this state but a parent or a person acting as a parent continues to
      live in this state . . . .

                                          14
Id. § 152.201(a)(1); see id. § 152.102(8) (defining “initial determination” to mean

“the first child custody determination concerning a particular child”). Family Code

section 152.201(a) “is the exclusive jurisdictional basis for making a child custody

determination by a court of this state.” Id. § 152.201(b). The UCCJEA defines

“home state” as “the state in which a child lived with a parent . . . for at least six

consecutive months immediately before the commencement of a child custody

proceeding.” Id. § 152.102(7). “A period of temporary absence of a parent or a

person acting as a parent is part of the period.” Id.

      Family Code section 152.202 addresses exclusive continuing jurisdiction of a

Texas court and provides:

      (a)    Except as otherwise provided in Section 152.204,4 a court of this
             state which has made a child custody determination consistent
             with Section 152.201 or 152.2035 has exclusive continuing
             jurisdiction over the determination until:
             (1)    a court of this state determines that neither the child, nor
                    the child and one parent, nor the child and a person acting
                    as a parent, have a significant connection with this state

4
      Section 152.204 provides that Texas courts have “temporary emergency jurisdiction
      if the child is present in this state and the child has been abandoned or it is necessary
      in an emergency to protect the child because the child, or a sibling or parent of the
      child, is subjected to or threatened with mistreatment or abuse.” TEX. FAM. CODE
      ANN. § 152.204(a). Hector has not argued that the trial court has jurisdiction under
      this provision.
5
      Section 152.203 provides that, except as provided in section 152.204, a Texas court
      may not modify a child custody determination made by a court of another state
      except in certain circumstances. See TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 152.203. Hector did
      not request that the trial court modify a child custody determination from another
      state, and this section is therefore not applicable to this case.
                                             15
                    and that substantial evidence is no longer available in this
                    state concerning the child’s care, protection, training, and
                    personal relationships; or
             (2)    a court of this state or a court of another state determines
                    that the child, the child’s parents, and any person acting as
                    a parent do not presently reside in this state.
      (b)    A court of this state which has made a child custody
             determination and does not have exclusive, continuing
             jurisdiction under this section may modify that determination
             only if it has jurisdiction to make an initial determination under
             Section 152.201.
Id. § 152.202; id. § 152.102(3) (defining “child custody determination” to mean “a

judgment, decree, or other order of a court providing for legal custody, physical

custody, or visitation with respect to a child” and stating that term “includes

permanent, temporary, initial, and modification orders”).

      “[E]xclusive jurisdiction continues in the decree-granting state as long as a

significant connection exists or substantial evidence is present.” Forlenza, 140
S.W.3d at 379 (noting that plain language of section 152.202(a)(1) provides that

jurisdiction continues until trial court determines no significant connection with

Texas exists and that substantial evidence concerning children’s care, protection,

training, and personal relationships is no longer available in Texas); In re Meekins,

550 S.W.3d 729, 738–39 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2018, orig. proceeding).

Even if the child acquires a new home state, the state that made the initial child

custody determination retains exclusive continuing jurisdiction “so long as the

general requisites of the ‘substantial connection’ jurisdiction provisions are met.” In
                                          16
re Tieri, 283 S.W.3d 889, 894 (Tex. App.—Tyler 2008, orig. proceeding [mand.

denied]). The state that made the initial child custody determination “is the sole

determinant of whether jurisdiction continues.” Id.; see In re J.P., 598 S.W.3d 789,

796 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2020, pet. denied) (“The UCCJEA gives [the court that

made an initial child custody determination] the sole power to decide whether it will

continue to exercise that jurisdiction.”).

B.    Analysis

      1.     Whether Trial Court Had Jurisdiction to Make Initial Child
             Custody Determination

      In his first issue, Hector argues that the trial court failed to correctly construe

the “home state” provision of the UCCJEA. In his second issue, he argues that the

trial court erred by not concluding that Texas had jurisdiction to make an initial child

custody determination. Hector argues that Texas was the home state of the children

at the time he filed for divorce in June 2012.

      Hector filed for divorce in Fort Bend County, Texas, in June 2012. It is

undisputed that the children had lived in Texas for the six consecutive months

immediately before Hector filed for divorce, which commenced the first child

custody proceeding involving the children. See TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 152.102(4)

(defining “child custody proceeding” as “a proceeding in which legal custody,

physical custody, or visitation with respect to a child is an issue” and stating that

term “includes a proceeding for divorce”), id. § 152.102(5) (defining

                                             17
“commencement” as “the filing of the first pleading in a proceeding”). The children

did not move to Mexico with Veronica until August or September 2012, after Hector

had commenced the divorce proceeding. Hector is therefore correct that, at the time

he filed his divorce petition, Texas was the home state of the children. See id.

§ 152.102(7) (defining “home state” as “the state in which a child lived with a

parent . . . for at least six consecutive months immediately before the

commencement of a child custody proceeding”); Powell v. Stover, 165 S.W.3d 322,

328 (Tex. 2005) (holding that, in determining where child lived for purposes of

establishing home-state jurisdiction, trial court must consider child’s physical

presence in state).

      Because Texas was the home state of the children on the date the divorce

proceeding commenced, Hector is also correct that Texas had jurisdiction under

Family Code section 152.201(a)(1) to make an initial child custody determination.

See TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 152.201(a)(1) (“[A] court of this state has jurisdiction

to make an initial child custody determination only if . . . this state is the home state

of the child on the date of the commencement of the proceeding . . . .”). Contrary to

Hector’s arguments in his first two issues on appeal, however, the trial court never

ruled that it did not have jurisdiction to make an initial child custody determination

or that Texas was not the children’s home state at the time Hector filed for divorce.

In fact, the agreed divorce decree, signed on January 22, 2013, correctly

                                           18
acknowledged that Texas was the home state of the children. Additionally, the trial

court, in its findings of fact and conclusions of law entered after it declined to

exercise jurisdiction over Hector’s modification and enforcement petitions, correctly

found that it had initial child custody jurisdiction under section 152.201(a)(1) when

it signed the agreed divorce decree.

      The relevant issue in this appeal is whether the trial court, after making an

initial child custody determination, retained exclusive continuing jurisdiction over

the children. Specifically, the issue is whether the trial court retained exclusive

continuing jurisdiction to rule on Hector’s motions for modification and enforcement

filed in April 2015. We therefore turn to that question.

      2.     Whether Trial Court Lost Exclusive Continuing Jurisdiction

      In his third and fourth issues, Hector argues that the trial court erred by

concluding that it did not retain exclusive continuing jurisdiction because this

conclusion was not supported by evidence in the record. Specifically, Hector

contends that evidence before the trial court established that the children had a

significant connection with Texas and that substantial evidence concerning their

care, protection, training, and personal relationships is available in Texas.

      As stated above, a court of this state which has made an initial child custody

determination has exclusive continuing jurisdiction over the determination until “a

court of this state determines that neither the child, nor the child and one

                                          19
parent . . . have a significant connection with this state and that substantial evidence

is no longer available in this state concerning the child’s care, protection, training,

and personal relationships,” or a court determines that the child and the child’s

parents do not presently reside in this state. TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 152.202(a).

Because it is undisputed that Hector still resides in Texas, we focus on whether the

children have a significant connection with Texas and whether substantial evidence

concerning their care, protection, training, and personal relationships is available in

Texas.

      “[E]xclusive jurisdiction continues in the decree-granting state as long as a

significant connection exists or substantial evidence is present.” Forlenza, 140
S.W.3d at 379; In re A.C.S., 157 S.W.3d 9, 16 (Tex. App.—Waco 2004, no pet.) (“If

either a ‘significant connection’ exists or ‘substantial evidence’ is present, then

Texas retains jurisdiction.”). In determining whether the children have a significant

connection with Texas, courts consider “the nature and quality of the child’s contacts

with the State.” In re T.B., 497 S.W.3d 640, 645 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2016, pet.

denied). “A high level of physical presence in Texas is not necessary to satisfy the

significant-connection standard.” In re S.J.A., 272 S.W.3d 678, 685 (Tex. App.—

Dallas 2008, no pet.). Among other factors, courts consider whether the children

visited a parent in Texas and whether they maintained a close relationship with a

parent or other relatives in Texas, both of which are “important considerations under

                                          20
the UCCJEA.” Forlenza, 140 S.W.3d at 377; see T.B., 497 S.W.3d at 646 (listing,

as some factors showing significant connection to Texas, whether child resides in

state, whether child attends school in state, whether child’s family resides in state,

and whether parent has made educational plans for child in state); A.C.S., 157
S.W.3d at 16 (“Visitation within the state is generally considered as evidence of a

significant connection, particularly when the children maintain a relationship with

relatives in the state other than the noncustodial parent.”).

      The fact that one parent continues to reside in Texas, standing alone, is not

determinative and does not support an exercise of exclusive continuing jurisdiction.

Isquierdo, 426 S.W.3d at 133–34. The UCCJEA “does not premise the exclusive

continuing jurisdiction determination on which state has the most significant

connection with the child.” Forlenza, 140 S.W.3d 378 (noting that “[t]his relative

type of inquiry is appropriate under section 152.207, which allows a court with

exclusive continuing jurisdiction to decline it in favor of a more convenient forum,

but it does not affect the initial section 152.202 jurisdictional analysis”). The relevant

time frame for determining whether the trial court retains exclusive continuing

jurisdiction is when the motion to modify the prior custody order is filed. See id. at

376 (agreeing that determination of whether trial court retains exclusive continuing

jurisdiction is made “at the proceeding’s commencement,” or filing of motion to

modify prior custody order); A.C.S., 157 S.W.3d at 16 (“The pertinent time frame

                                           21
for this determination is when the motion to modify the prior custody order is

filed.”).

       Here, the trial court signed several orders declining jurisdiction over the case.

At Hector’s request, the trial court issued findings of fact and conclusions of law.

The trial court found that Veronica and the children had moved to Mexico in

September 2012, where they had lived continuously ever since. The court found that

the parties agreed, in the agreed divorce decree, that the children could continue to

live in Mexico until August 1, 2014, but the children would return to Fort Bend

County on or before that day. The court, citing email exchanges with Veronica that

Hector had attached to a “Motion for Determination of Jurisdiction,” found that

Hector attempted to exercise visitation on at least seven occasions “which was not

facilitated by” Veronica, specifically “Summer Possession 2013, Spring Possession

2014, April 2014, Summer Possession 2015, End of Year 2016, Summer Possession

2017, end of year visitation 2017.”6 The last four visitation attempts enumerated in

the trial court’s findings occurred after Hector had filed his modification and

enforcement petitions. The court found that Hector “maintained a relationship with

the children before, during and after the Divorce proceedings,” citing an exhibit

Hector attached to the “Motion for Determination of Jurisdiction.”

6
       The record reflects, however, that Veronica did send the children to Texas for court-
       ordered visitation with Hector twice—for a week in March 2016 and for a month in
       the summer of 2016.
                                            22
      The trial court also made several findings concerning procedural occurrences

during the pendency of the case. The court found that, in March 2016, Veronica

initiated a suit in Mexico to terminate Hector’s parental rights to the children. The

court found that, in an order dated December 6, 2016, it ruled that Veronica’s

retention of the children in Mexico after August 1, 2014, “breached the child custody

rights of Hector Xavier Cortez pursuant to the [Hague] Convention Article 3.” The

court also found that it had issued three rulings declining jurisdiction over

modification of the parent-child relationship, but maintaining jurisdiction over child

support issues, in August 2018, November 2018, and April 2019. The court further

found “that no legal pleadings were filed until April 21, 2015, more than three years

after the mother and child[ren] moved to Mexico.” The trial court concluded that

“neither the child[ren], nor the child[ren] and one parent, nor the child[ren] and a

person acting as a parent, have a significant connection with this state and that

substantial evidence is no longer available in the state concerning the child[ren’s]

care, protection, training and personal relationships.” The trial court did not make

any findings and conclusions concerning whether Texas is an inconvenient forum.

      Hector argues that the trial court erred by concluding that it does not retain

exclusive continuing jurisdiction over the case because the children have a

significant connection to Texas and substantial evidence concerning their care,

protection, training, and personal relationships is available in Texas. We disagree.

                                         23
      It is undisputed that Veronica and the children have lived in Mexico since

September 2012, and that they had lived in Mexico for nearly three years at the time

Hector filed his modification and enforcement petitions in April 2015. It is also

undisputed that Hector lived in Texas at the time he filed for divorce in June 2012

and has continued to live in Texas ever since. It is further undisputed that the parties

agreed, in the agreed divorce decree, that the children could live with Veronica in

Mexico until August 1, 2014, at which point she was to return to Fort Bend County

with the children, but Veronica remained in Mexico with the children after August

1, 2014.

      The record contains evidence that the children have visited Hector in Texas

only twice since they moved to Mexico in September 2012—for a week in March

2016 and for a month in summer 2016—both of which occurred at the order of the

trial court, and both occurred after Hector filed his modification and enforcement

petitions. Hector presented evidence, in the form of email exchanges with Veronica,

that he had attempted to exercise visitation with the children in Texas on several

occasions prior to filing his modification and enforcement petitions—including a

month of possession in summer 2013, possession during Holy Week in spring 2014,

and a possible visitation in San Antonio in spring 2014—but Veronica did not

cooperate. The record also contained evidence that Hector could not visit the

children in Mexico due to issues with the State Department’s not renewing his

                                          24
passport7 and that the children’s passports expired during the pendency of the

proceedings, and Hector and Veronica were unable to coordinate the necessary

documents and notarizations that needed to occur to renew the passports. Hector

submitted pictures demonstrating his involvement with the children before the

divorce, pictures from his online contacts with the children while they were living

in Mexico, and pictures from the two court-ordered visits he had with the children

in Texas in 2016.

      The record before the trial court included an affidavit by Veronica that she

filed with her counter-petition to modify the agreed divorce decree. In this affidavit,

Veronica averred that she and the children have lived in Monterrey, Mexico since

September 2012, when they moved to Mexico at Hector’s request. Veronica and the

children live close to Hector’s mother in Monterrey, but she does not visit the

children often or attend events with the children, even though Veronica invites her.

Veronica averred that she has “attempted to promote” the relationship between

Hector and the children by telephone, but he rarely answers. She averred that, as of

July 2015, Hector had not seen the children in person since January 2013. She stated

that Hector and the children communicated through the children’s gaming console,

but she also stated that, as of the time she learned of Hector’s modification

7
      Veronica averred that Hector told her that Mexican Border Patrol seized his
      passport, but that he also told her that he had traveled internationally for his job.
                                           25
proceeding, Hector had not attempted to speak with the children in three months.

Veronica averred that she had attempted to coordinate visitation between the

children and Hector in Houston for the month of July 2015, but Hector never

responded, and he did not cooperate with her when she told him the children’s

American passports were to expire in July 2015.

      Veronica also averred that she had remarried and that she had health problems

during a pregnancy in summer 2014 that prevented her from moving back to Texas

with the children. She averred that she discussed these health concerns with Hector,

and he agreed that she and the children need not move back to Texas at that time.

She also averred that, when she signed the agreed divorce decree at Hector’s request,

he told her, “if August comes [August 2014] and you don’t want to come back [from

Monterrey], you can stay.” At the time of Veronica’s affidavit in July 2015, she was

again suffering health complications from another pregnancy and could not travel to

Texas. She averred that, in June 2014, Hector stopped making the contractual

alimony payments required by the divorce decree, and he stopped listing the children

as covered under his health insurance. Veronica averred that the children were

covered under her current husband’s health insurance, but the children would not be

covered in the United States. Veronica also averred that her current husband has a

brain tumor, and if he were to move with her and the children to the United States,

he and the children would lose their insurance coverage.

                                         26
      Veronica further averred that she works at an “expensive and very reputable

private school” in Monterrey and that the children attend the school at no cost. At a

hearing on Hector’s motion to determine jurisdiction, Veronica’s counsel

represented that the children were enrolled in “integration therapy” in Mexico as

required by the proceedings in the Mexican court.

      Based on this record, the only connection the children have to Texas is the

fact that Hector lives in Texas. Since the children moved to Mexico in September

2012—a move that Veronica avers occurred at Hector’s direction—the children have

been to Texas to visit Hector twice, once for less than two weeks and once for a

month. There is no evidence in the record that, since moving to Mexico, the children

have had friends or other family members in Texas that they have visited, that they

have visited doctors in Texas, or that Hector has made any educational plans for the

children in Texas. See T.B., 497 S.W.3d at 646 (listing, as some factors showing

significant connection to Texas, whether child resides in state, whether child attends

school in state, whether child’s family resides in state, and whether parent has made

educational plans for child in state); A.C.S., 157 S.W.3d at 16 (“Visitation within the

state is generally considered as evidence of a significant connection, particularly

when the children maintain a relationship with relatives in the state other than the

noncustodial parent.”). Instead, the children live in Mexico, at least one member of

Hector’s family lives near them in Mexico, the children attend school in Mexico,

                                          27
and the children attend therapy in Mexico. Evidence relevant to the children’s care,

protection, training, and personal relationships is thus available in Mexico, not in

Texas. The fact that Hector lives in Texas and the children have visited him here

twice is not enough to support a conclusion that the children have a significant

connection to Texas. See Isquierdo, 426 S.W.3d at 132–34 (concluding that children

did not maintain significant connection to Texas when children had spent previous

six years living out of Texas, children had not been present in Texas except for “the

few visitations” requested by father, children had had no contact with Texas in three

years preceding modification proceeding, and father did not make any visitation

requests during those three years, and concluding that father’s continued residence

in Texas, by itself, did not support exercise of exclusive continuing jurisdiction).

Additionally, there is no evidence that Veronica has had any connection to Texas

since she moved to Mexico in September 2012.

      We therefore conclude that the trial court did not err by determining that

neither the children, nor the children and one parent, had a significant connection

with Texas and that substantial evidence is no longer available in Texas concerning

the children’s care, protection, training, and personal relationships. See TEX. FAM.

CODE ANN. § 152.202(a)(1); Isquierdo, 426 S.W.3d at 132–33, 135. We hold that

the trial court did not err by ruling that it no longer retains exclusive continuing

                                         28
jurisdiction over the possession, access, and conservatorship aspects of the parent-

child relationship between Hector and the children.

      We overrule Hector’s third and fourth issues.8

                                       Conclusion

      We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

                                                  Evelyn V. Keyes
                                                  Justice

Panel consists of Justices Keyes, Lloyd, and Landau.

8
      In his fifth issue, Hector argues that the trial court erred by refusing to hear his
      motion for enforcement of the geographic restriction contained in the agreed divorce
      decree. In this issue, Hector argues that the trial court erred to the extent it declined
      jurisdiction on the basis that Texas is an inconvenient forum. See TEX. FAM. CODE
      ANN. § 152.207(a)–(b) (providing that if Texas court has jurisdiction under
      UCCJEA, court may decline to exercise its jurisdiction if it determines that it is an
      inconvenient forum and court of another state is more appropriate forum, and stating
      that court “shall consider all relevant factors,” including eight specifically
      enumerated factors). The trial court here did not make any findings or conclusions
      concerning the factors contained in section 152.207(b). Instead, the trial court based
      its decision on section 152.202(a)(1), concluding that it did not retain exclusive
      continuing jurisdiction. Because we conclude that the trial court did not err by
      concluding that it no longer retained exclusive continuing jurisdiction, the trial court
      did not err by refusing to hear Hector’s motion for enforcement of the geographic
      restriction, and we need not address the factors relevant to whether Texas is an
      inconvenient forum, set out in section 152.207(b).
                                             29