Court Opinion

ID: 9956062
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-03-31 07:16:17.112054+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:15:06.449868
License: Public Domain

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed March 26, 2024.

                                       In The

                     Fourteenth Court of Appeals

                               NO. 14-23-00572-CV

                    IN THE INTEREST OF J.S.N., A CHILD

                    On Appeal from the 247th District Court
                            Harris County, Texas
                      Trial Court Cause No. 2018-84640

                           MEMORANDUM OPINION

      This appeal involves jurisdiction of a child custody matter. P.K.N. (Father),
appeals the trial court’s order granting primary custody of J.S.N. (the child) to M.R.
(Mother). In a single issue on appeal Father contends the trial court erred in denying
his plea to the jurisdiction. We affirm.

                                    BACKGROUND

      Mother and Father were divorced in Michigan in 2016 when the child was two
years old. The child was born in Michigan and is a United States citizen. From
January 2016 through June 2017 the parents exercised joint custody of the child
alternating three-month possession periods. At the time Father lived in Michigan and
Mother lived in Houston, Texas. In June 2017 Father took the child to India,
purportedly with Mother’s permission. Father told Mother he wanted to exercise his
three-month parenting time in India rather than Michigan. The child remained in
India for more than a year until November 2018. At the heart of this dispute are
accusations by both parents that the other parent abducted the child. Mother asserted
that Father abducted the child when he kept him in India beyond his three-month
possession period. Father asserted Mother abducted the child from India when she
retrieved him and brought him back to the United States in November 2018.

      The parties’ divorce decree was signed by a Michigan court on January 21,
2016. The Michigan decree ordered joint custody of the child on a three-month
rotating possession schedule. The Michigan order further prohibited either parent
from exercising parenting time in a nation that was not a party to the Hague
Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction unless both
parents provided the court with written consent to allow parenting time in a nation
not a party to the convention. India is not a party to the Hague Convention.

I.    Events in India

      In June 2017 Father asked permission to travel to India with the child to
exercise his parenting time. Under the Michigan decree Mother’s parenting time
would begin in September 2017. Mother agreed to allow Father to take the child to
India with the understanding that Mother would begin her parenting time three
months later in September. While Father and the child were in India Father notified
Mother that his father was terminally ill and asked permission to keep the child an
additional three months in India. Mother agreed to the additional three months to
allow Father to spend time with his terminally-ill father.

      Mother had planned a vacation to India to visit her family in 2017, and
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traveled to India in September 2017 to visit the child. According to Mother, Father
denied her access to the child except for two days during the month Mother spent in
India. Mother did not agree to allow the child’s residence to be changed to India.
When it became clear that Father would not return the child to the United States,
Mother worked with the United States State Department to have a notice issued by
Interpol indicating the child had been kidnapped by Father.

      Father filed a petition in a family court in India in which he asserted that the
Indian court had exclusive jurisdiction over the child and that the Michigan court
had lost jurisdiction. Mother filed a counter-petition in the Indian court stating that
the child was an American citizen who had been illegally and unlawfully removed
and retained in India. Mother requested that the child be returned to the United
States. In September 2018 the Indian court granted Mother a period of possession
with the child but required her to tender her passport. The Indian court refused to
return Mother’s passport unless she returned the child to Father.

      On November 15, 2018, a hearing was scheduled on the parties’ competing
petitions for custody in the Indian court. Father left the child with his parents and
traveled to another town to attend the hearing. On that day, Mother dismissed her
counter-petition in the Indian court, and retrieved the child from Father’s parents’
home with the help of two men who had been helping her while she was in India.
Mother testified that one of the men was an acquaintance who came with her to
protect her from potential physical assault by Father. Given Father’s history of
domestic violence and the “hostile nature of [her] in-laws” Mother did not feel
comfortable going to her in-laws’ home alone.

      After retrieving the child Mother drove to a nearby town with the goal of
taking a flight to Delhi. The United States State Department helped Mother obtain a
duplicate passport for the child because he had been kidnapped. Mother attempted

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to board a plane in Delhi with the child but was denied access. Mother was forced
to travel 24 hours via land to Nepal where she could travel by air to China and
eventually back to Texas.

      On April 17, 2019, the Indian family court issued an order in which it stated
that Father had been found guilty of parental kidnapping by Interpol. The Indian
court subsequently issued an order in which it found that Father violated the
Michigan order by taking the child to India without the Michigan court’s approval.
The Indian court rejected Father’s claim that Mother gave him permission to take
the child to India. On December 20, 2019, the Indian court dismissed Father’s
petition seeking custody in India. Father appealed, and the Indian Supreme Court
reversed the family court’s decision, and found the Indian court had jurisdiction over
the dispute.

II.   Events in Michigan

      On August 16, 2018, while the child was still being held in India by Father,
Mother filed in the Michigan court an “Ex Parte Motion to Order Return of the Child
from India.” Two days later, the Michigan court entered an “Ex Parte Order for
Immediate Return of the Minor Child.” Upon learning the child was not returned,
the court entered an “Order to Appear and Show Cause for Violating Judgment of
Divorce” requiring Father to appear with the child. Father did not appear with the
child in the Michigan court.

      On October 1, 2018, the Michigan court signed an order declining jurisdiction
over the custody proceedings. The court’s order noted that Mother had lived in Texas
since 2015, and Father took the child to India on June 11, 2017, and had violated the
court’s orders by failing to return with the child.

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III.   Events in Texas

       Mother returned with the child to Houston, Texas, and filed a motion to
modify the Michigan custody order in a Harris County court. In Mother’s motion to
modify she alleged Father “wrongfully abducted and illegally retained” the child in
India, and refused to return the child.

       In response to Mother’s motion, Father filed a special appearance, plea to the
jurisdiction, and motion to dismiss. As relevant to this appeal, Father alleged Texas
did not have jurisdiction to modify the Michigan order under the Uniform Child
Custody Jurisdiction Enforcement Act (UCCJEA). Father alleged that because
Michigan declined jurisdiction, Texas could only exercise jurisdiction if it had
jurisdiction to make an initial child custody determination under Family Code
section 152.201, which prescribes home-state jurisdiction. Father alleged that India
became the child’s home state as of December 11, 2017, after the child lived
continuously with Father in India since June 11, 2017. Father alleged, therefore, that
under the UCCJEA, India was the child’s home state, not Texas.

       Father swore in an affidavit attached to his plea to the jurisdiction that Mother
“and two henchmen criminally trespassed into my home at Tirupati, assaulted my
70 year old mother and my housekeeper, and violently removed [the child] from my
house.” Father attached to his motion a petition he filed in India seeking custody of
the child.

       Mother responded to Father’s plea to the jurisdiction and alleged that Father
abducted the child by retaining him in India beyond the original time to which
Mother agreed. Mother asserted Father could not use the wrongful abduction of the
child to establish home state residency.

       On March 4, 2019, the Harris County trial court held a hearing on Father’s

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plea to the jurisdiction. At the hearing Mother testified that in June 2017 she agreed
that Father could travel with the child to India. Under the decree, Mother’s parenting
time would begin in September 2017. Mother traveled to India to visit the child in
September 2017. Mother testified that she never intended to move to India and that
she did not seek a custody determination from the courts of India. In 2017 Mother
was a staff physician at Baylor College of Medicine, and at the time of the hearing
she was a professor at Baylor College of Medicine. Mother did not seek employment
in India. While Mother agreed that Father could travel to India with the child, she
never agreed to allow the child’s residence to be changed to India. Father had taken
the child to India two times before and had timely returned the child to the United
States each time. Mother did not sign medical consent forms permitting Father to
make medical decisions concerning the child. Mother provided consent for Father
and the child to travel to India with the understanding that they would return within
three months. Mother agreed to allow the child to stay an additional three months
with Father in September 2017 because Father claimed that his father was terminally
ill. Mother traveled to India to see the child, but Father denied access to the child.
Mother did not threaten Father or any members of his family.

      On March 21, 2019, the hearing resumed, and Father testified via Zoom.
Father testified that Mother consented to him taking the child to India in June 2017
with the condition that when Mother came to India on vacation in September 2017
that the child could stay with her and her parents for that month. Contradicting
Mother’s testimony, Father testified that he and Mother agreed to both move to India
with the child. Father accused Mother of kidnapping the child. Father testified that
if he kept the child in India he might travel to the United States once a year, or once
every two years. On the record, the trial court noted that this testimony conflicted
with Father’s deposition testimony in which he stated that he never planned to return

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the child to the United States.

      On May 3, 2019, the Harris County trial court denied Father’s plea to the
jurisdiction and Father requested findings of fact and conclusions of law. The trial
court issued temporary orders designating Mother as the temporary sole managing
conservator and granting Father periods of possession. On March 1, 2023, after
Father filed a motion to reconsider, the trial court signed another order denying
Father’s plea to the jurisdiction in which the trial court found that the child had no
home state at the time the SAPCR commenced in Harris County.1

      On May 16, 2023, the trial court signed a final order after a bench trial. The
trial court determined that the Texas court had jurisdiction over the child and the
Michigan order precluded the courts of India from assuming jurisdiction. The trial
court further found that the child was wrongfully detained in India and the time he
spent in India could not be considered for purposes of determining home state
jurisdiction because a prior order prohibited Father from seeking to establish the
child’s residency in India. The trial court determined that Father “engaged in a
scheme to lure the child to India so that he might wrongfully retain and abduct the
child for purposes of seeking to establish jurisdiction improperly in India, and to
withhold the child from [Mother].” The trial court went on to award sole managing
conservatorship to Mother.

      On July 18, 2023, the trial court signed findings of fact and conclusions of
law. As pertinent to Father’s appeal challenging jurisdiction, those findings were as
follows:

      7.     The Jan. 21, 2016 Michigan Judgment of Divorce is the prior
             controlling custody order, which was never modified by the

1
  On December 13, 2021, Mother’s suit affecting the parent-child relationship (SAPCR) was
dismissed for want of prosecution, but later reinstated on March 9, 2022.

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      Michigan Court.
8.    It is this prior order for which modification is being sought in this
      SAPCR proceeding here.
22.   With the parties having agreed that [Father] could take [the child]
      to India for short periods to visit family, the Michigan order
      confirmed that a party’s physical possession of the child would
      not affect legal residence for custody jurisdiction unless both
      parties agreed.
23.   [Mother] never gave permission to [Father], either in writing or
      verbally, for [the child’s] legal residence to be changed to India
      under the Michigan order.
26.   The parties had included the non-Hague Country provision in the
      Michigan order specifically in reference to India, and this was to
      address any concern that [Father] might try to take [the child] to
      India for purposes of establishing child custody jurisdiction
      there.
39.   [Father] asked [Mother] to extend the possession period to six
      months on and off, saying that he needed the extra time in India
      because of his sick father.
40.   However, [Father] admitted in deposition testimony that he had
      no pressing reason to stay longer in India, and that his father was
      not terminally ill and did recover.
42.   However, [Father] would later use this six-month period of
      possession as his primary argument for saying that India had
      home-state custody jurisdiction, to the exclusion of Texas or
      Michigan.
43.   This was part of an ill-intentioned ruse by [Father] to abduct [the
      child] and to wrongfully retain [the child] away from [Mother]
      in India.
45.   [Father] falsely claimed that [Mother] had agreed to relocate
      herself to India and that she was looking for jobs in India.
46.   This was false. [Mother] had a prestigious job as a professor for
      Baylor College of Medicine and was never considering quitting
      her medical career in Texas to go to India, and she did not search
      for jobs in India.
56.   A 9/20/2018 [Michigan] order was issued for [Father] to return
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      [the child] to the United States. [Father] did not comply.
57.   The Michigan court also issued a show cause order against
      [Father] expressly finding that [Father] had wrongfully retained
      [the child] in India and had failed to return the child to [Mother]
      for her possession period.
58.   The Michigan court issued another order requiring [the child] to
      be returned to [Mother], that she was to have possession under
      the Michigan order.
59.   [Father] failed to comply with any of these orders. Once the
      Michigan court realized it could do nothing, it declined to
      exercise its jurisdiction as an inconvenient forum. It did not,
      however determine that India had child custody jurisdiction, and
      the Michigan orders for the return of the child had found that
      [Father] was guilty of wrongfully retaining the child.
70.   After [an Indian court gave Mother only two days’ visitation with
      the child], [Mother] approached the United States Department of
      State for help.
71.   At the request of the State Department, Interpol issued a Yellow
      Notice regarding [the child], noting his wrongful abduction,
      which was admitted as PX-15.
73.   The State Department obtained replacement passports for [the
      child], and helped arranged [Mother’s] potential return to the
      United States. During [Mother’s] period of possession, [Mother]
      took [the child] and then returned with him to Texas.
77.   Over the course of the history of this proceeding, [Father] has
      testified to this Court multiple times, and the Court does not find
      him to be a credible witness. Also admitted as evidence was
      [Father’s] deposition taken in this case in which he made many
      inconsistent statements under oath.
80.   As to [Father’s] plea to the jurisdiction, [Father] wrongfully
      abducted and retained the child in violation of the Michigan
      orders, under which India could not have acquired child custody
      jurisdiction.
81.   Because [Father] could not wrongfully establish jurisdiction in
      India, which did not also issue a child custody determination, and
      because Michigan had declined jurisdiction, there was no

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               exercising home state jurisdiction, and the Court found that it had
               jurisdiction to issue a custody determination under Tex. Fam.
               Code § 152.201(a)(4).

       In the trial court’s conclusions of law, the court found it had jurisdiction
pursuant to section 152.201[(a)](4) of the Family Code, and found that Mother was
entitled to a modified custody order based on substantial and material change in
circumstances and best interest of the child. See Tex. Fam. Code § 156.101.

       Father timely appealed the trial court’s SAPCR judgment including the denial
of his plea to the jurisdiction.

                                       ANALYSIS

       In a single issue on appeal Father asserts the trial court lacked jurisdiction
over the SAPCR because India was the child’s home state at the time the
modification suit was filed. Father does not challenge any other portion of the trial
court’s judgment. Mother did not file a responsive brief.

I.     Standard of Review

       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.”).
Whether a trial court has subject matter jurisdiction is a question of law we review
de novo. City of Houston v. Williams, 353 S.W.3d 128, 133–34 (Tex. 2011). When
considering a plea to the jurisdiction, our analysis begins with the live pleadings.
Heckman v. Williamson Cnty., 369 S.W.3d 137, 150 (Tex. 2012). We first determine
if the pleader has alleged facts that affirmatively demonstrate the court’s jurisdiction
to hear the case. Tex. Dep’t. of Parks & Wildlife v. Miranda, 133 S.W.3d 217, 226
(Tex. 2004).

                                            10
       When, as here, a plea to the jurisdiction challenges the existence of
jurisdictional facts, we look beyond the pleadings and consider evidence submitted
by the parties when necessary to resolve the jurisdictional issues raised. Id. at 227.
Evidentiary review is confined to evidence relevant to the jurisdictional issue, and
our task is to determine whether a fact issue exists. Id.; see Bland Indep. Sch. Dist.
v. Blue, 34 S.W.3d 547, 555 (Tex. 2000). If the plaintiff’s factual allegations are
challenged with supporting evidence, to avoid dismissal, the plaintiff must raise a
genuine issue of material fact to overcome the challenge of the trial court’s subject-
matter jurisdiction. Miranda, 133 S.W.3d at 221. If the evidence creates a fact issue
as to the jurisdictional issue, the trial court must deny the plea to the jurisdiction and
the fact issue is left for the fact finder to resolve. Id. at 227–28. However, if the
relevant evidence fails to raise a fact issue on the jurisdictional issue, the trial court
grants the plea to the jurisdiction and rules on jurisdiction as a matter of law. Id. at
228.

II.    Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act

       The UCCJEA, which has been adopted by most states, helps ensure custody
determinations are “rendered in [the] State which can best decide the case in the
interest of the child.” In re D.S., 602 S.W.3d 504, 513 (Tex. 2020) (quoting Unif.
Child Custody Jurisdiction & Enf’t Act, § 101 cmt., 9 U.L.A. 657 (Nat’l Conference
of Comm’rs on Unif. State Laws 1999)). The law is designed to deter child
abductions and minimize “the shifting of children from State to State,” which can
adversely affect their well-being. Id. The UCCJEA advances an overarching
objective of expediency and stability in an increasingly mobile world by helping
prevent manipulation of the system and undue complication of child-custody
disputes, which can occur when a child is moved from one state to another. Id. The
text of the UCCJEA explicitly states that foreign countries are treated as “states.”

                                           11
Tex. Fam. Code § 152.105(a).

       Though Texas district courts have general jurisdiction over child-custody
matters, our Legislature adopted the UCCJEA in 1999 as Chapter 152 of the Family
Code, and the UCCJEA articulates circumstances under which a court has, or loses,
jurisdiction over child-custody determinations. See Tex. Fam. Code § 152.201(a).
For purposes of the UCCJEA, jurisdiction is determined at the time child-custody
proceedings commence. Tex. Fam. Code § 152.201(a).

III.   Texas court’s jurisdiction over modification proceeding

       Generally, under the UCCJEA, the court that makes the initial child custody
determination will retain exclusive continuing jurisdiction over ongoing custody
disputes. In re D.A.P., 267 S.W.3d 485, 487 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2008,
no pet.). Texas state courts lack subject-matter jurisdiction to modify the child-
custody determinations of a court in another state unless the requirements of section
152.203 of the Family Code are satisfied. See Tex. Fam. Code § 152.203.

       The UCCJEA provides that a Texas court has jurisdiction to modify orders
from another state that affect the parent-child relationship if the following
requirements are met:

       • Texas would have jurisdiction to make an initial determination under
       either UCCJEA section 152.201(a)(1) (“home-state jurisdiction”) or
       (a)(2)(“significant connection jurisdiction”), and
       • the court of the other state determines it no longer has exclusive
       continuing jurisdiction under section 152.202 or that a court of this state
       would be a more convenient forum under section 152.207.

                                           12
See Tex. Fam. Code § 152.203.2

       Under this two-pronged analysis, we first examine whether Texas would have
jurisdiction to make an initial determination of custody under either section
152.201(a)(1)’s home-state jurisdiction or under section 152.201(a)(2)’s significant-
connection jurisdiction, recognizing that Texas needs to meet only one of the
subsections of 152.201(a) to satisfy the first prong. In re S.L.P., 123 S.W.3d 685,
688 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2003, no pet.). We then address the second prong and
determine whether the state making the initial child-custody decision—in this case
Michigan—concluded either that it no longer possesses continuing jurisdiction or
that a Texas court would be a more convenient forum. See Tex. Fam. Code §§
152.202; 152.207.

       We will summarize the first two possible bases of jurisdiction in Texas and
then examine whether any of the two authorizes a Texas court to modify the
Michigan court’s custody determination.

       (1) Home State Jurisdiction—A Texas court has jurisdiction if Texas is 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 or was the
home state of the child within six months before the commencement of the
proceeding and the child is absent from the state, but a parent continues to live in
Texas. See Tex. Fam. Code §§ 152.102(7), 152.201(a)(1).

       The undisputed facts compel the conclusion that Texas was not the home state
of the child at the time Mother filed her motion to modify. He did not live in Texas

2
  Father initially contends that the trial court erred in finding it had “default jurisdiction” under
section 152.201(a)(4). While we agree the default jurisdiction portion of the code does not apply
to a modification proceeding, we review whether the trial court had subject-matter jurisdiction de
novo and will uphold the trial court’s finding of jurisdiction if it is correct under the applicable
Family Code sections.

                                                 13
for six months before Mother filed the motion to modify. The trial court found that
the child did not have a home state at the time the SAPCR commenced.

      (2) Significant Connection Jurisdiction—A Texas court may also have
jurisdiction if no court from another jurisdiction qualifies as the home state of the
child under (1) above or the home state court of the child has declined to exercise
jurisdiction on the ground that such court is an inconvenient forum or due to
unjustifiable conduct (such as kidnapping) by a person seeking to invoke that court’s
jurisdiction and the child and at least one parent have significant contacts with Texas.
See Tex. Fam. Code §§ 152.201(a)(2), 152.207, 152.208.

      For the reasons stated below, we conclude the trial court had significant
connection jurisdiction under section 152.201(a)(2).

IV.   First prong—jurisdiction to make initial custody decision

      Under the first prong of the statutory test to determine whether the trial court
had subject-matter jurisdiction over Mother’s SAPCR to modify the Michigan
court’s order concerning child custody, we examine whether Texas would have
jurisdiction to make an initial custody determination under either section
152.201(a)(1) or (2). See Tex. Fam. Code § 152.203. To recap, section 152.201(a)(2)
provides, in pertinent part, that a Texas court may make an initial child-custody
determination when the child and at least one of the child’s parents has a significant
connection with Texas (subsection A) and when substantial evidence is available in
Texas concerning the child’s protection, training, and personal relationships
(subsection B). See Tex. Fam. Code § 152.201(a)(2)(A), (B).

      Since the child did not have a home state at the time Mother filed the motion
to modify, the trial court had jurisdiction to make an initial custody determination
under section 152.201(a)(2) if the child and Mother had a significant connection with

                                          14
Texas other than mere physical presence and substantial evidence was available in
Texas concerning the child’s present or future care, protection, training, and personal
relationships. Tex. Fam. Code § 152.201(a); In re Brilliant, 86 S.W.3d 680, 690
(Tex. App.—El Paso 2002, no pet.). 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.).

      Looking to whether the child and at least one of his parents has a significant
connection with Texas and whether substantial evidence is available in Texas
concerning the child’s protection, training, and personal relationships, the record
before us shows the following. Mother has resided in Texas since 2015. The child
and Mother have resided in Texas since November 2018 when Mother retrieved the
child from India. Mother testified she has a support group in Texas consisting of
friends and family. See In re Forlenza, 140 S.W.3d 373, 377 (Tex. 2004)
(recognizing fact that children’s relatives resided in Texas and maintained
relationship with children constituted a significant connection to Texas). Since the
child’s return from India Father has not visited him once. Father communicated with
the child via text messages and emails. Father threatened Mother with criminal
charges in India impeding her ability to visit her family.

      The evidence supports the determination that the child and Mother have a
significant connection with Texas and that substantial evidence is available in Texas
concerning the child’s protection, training, and personal relationships. See id.; see
also Cortez v. Cortez, 639 S.W.3d 298, 309 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2021,
no pet.) (“One party’s efforts to thwart the other party’s rights to access to the child
may be considered in the court’s analysis under Section 152.202.”); In re Brilliant,
86 S.W.3d at 692 (court was “disinclined to accord much weight to attachments”
child may have developed in Massachusetts when mother moved her there “in

                                          15
complete and utter disregard of a court order” to remain in Texas). Consequently, in
determining whether the child had a significant connection to Texas, we cannot
ignore evidence of Father’s continuous disregard of the divorce decree and his
thwarting of Mother’s rights to access to the child. Thus, the first prong of section
152.203’s modification jurisdiction is established.

V.    Second prong—when home-state court determines that it no longer has
      exclusive continuing jurisdiction

      A court in Texas has jurisdiction to modify another court’s decree if the court
of the other state determines it no longer has exclusive continuing jurisdiction under
section 202 of the UCCJEA. See Tex. Fam. Code § 152.203(1).

      Mother initially filed a motion to modify in the Michigan court. The record
contains an October 1, 2018 order from the Michigan court declining jurisdiction on
the grounds that Mother lived in Texas at the time and since 2015, and Father took
the child to India and expressed a desire to remain in India with the child indefinitely.
The Michigan court declined exclusive continuing jurisdiction as an inconvenient
forum pursuant to section 207 of the UCCJEA. See Mich. Comp. Laws §
722.1202(2).

      Applying the non-exclusive inconvenient forum factors, we note that Mother
and the child have lived in Texas since November 2018; thus they have resided
outside the home state of Michigan for almost five years before the trial court made
its custody decision. Mother testified that Father engaged in domestic violence and
she feared both him and his parents. The Harris County trial court’s order was signed
after the Michigan court declined jurisdiction and recites findings that the Michigan
court declined jurisdiction. The record supports the trial court’s finding that the
Michigan court declined jurisdiction as an inconvenient forum.

                                           16
VI.   Father’s assertion that India is the child’s home state

      Father asserts that because the child was in India for over seventeen
consecutive months at the time of Mother’s SAPCR filing, India was the child’s
home state, and any custody determination must be made by the Indian courts. Father
asserts that, contrary to the trial court’s finding, the child was not without a home
state at the time the SAPCR was filed because India was the child’s home state at
the time.

      While the child lived outside Michigan for seventeen months in India, the
Michigan court determined that the child’s time in India could not be considered
because Father abducted the child to establish home state jurisdiction. The Harris
County trial court found India could not have acquired child custody jurisdiction
because Father abducted the child in an attempt to establish jurisdiction. While
Father accused Mother of abduction, the record supports the trial court’s findings
that Father abducted the child and Mother worked through appropriate government
channels to retrieve the child and return him to the United States. The trial court
found that Father “wrongfully abducted and retained the child in violation of the
Michigan orders, under which India could not have acquired child custody
jurisdiction.”

      The drafters of the UCCJEA were concerned with parents who abducted a
child for the purpose of establishing jurisdiction in a desired state. See
Commissioners’ Office Comment to UCCJEA Section 208 (targeting parents who
abduct, secrete, retain, or restrain their children for legal advantage), reprinted in
Sampson and Tindall’s Texas Family Code Annotated § 152.208 (2011 ed.)).
Subject to certain exceptions, the Family Code prevents these parents from receiving
any benefit under the UCCJEA. See, e.g., In re Lewin, 149 S.W.3d 727, 740 (Tex.
App.—Austin 2004, orig. proceeding) (“To allow a parent to deliberately secrete a

                                         17
child to Texas for the purpose of obtaining a child custody determination in the state
would make a mockery of the statute.”).

      Courts simply do not permit parents to kidnap children. The statutory
framework of the UCCJEA, as adopted in Chapter 152 of the Family Code, was
“particularly designed to deter parents from abducting children for the purpose of
obtaining custody awards.” In re Carpenter, 835 S.W.2d 760, 762 (Tex. App.—
Amarillo 1992, no writ). We therefore conclude the trial court did not err in
determining that India could not be the child’s home state.

                                   CONCLUSION

      The record supports the trial court’s findings that the Texas court had
jurisdiction to modify the Michigan court’s custody order. We hold the court did not
err in denying Father’s plea to the jurisdiction and overrule Father’s sole issue on
appeal. Having overruled Father’s issue on appeal we affirm the trial court’s
judgment.

                                       /s/     Jerry Zimmerer
                                               Justice

Panel consists of Justices Wise, Zimmerer, and Wilson.

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