                                                                                             ACCEPTED
                                                                                          04-14-00547CV
                                                                             FOURTH COURT OF APPEALS
                                                                                  SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS
                                                                                   10/16/2015 4:46:45 PM
                                                                                          KEITH HOTTLE
                                                                                                  CLERK

                               NO. 04-14-00547-CV

         ______________________________________________________
                                                           FILED IN
                                                 4th COURT OF APPEALS
                                                  SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS
                      IN THE COURT OF APPEALS    10/16/2015 4:46:45 PM
                  FOURTH SUPREME JUDICIAL DISTRICT KEITH E. HOTTLE
                                                          Clerk
                         SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS
         ______________________________________________________

                  IN THE INTEREST OF T.S.P., A CHILD
         ______________________________________________________

                             APPELLANT’S
                       MOTION FOR REHEARING
         ______________________________________________________


TO THE HONORABLE JUSTICES OF THE COURT OF APPEALS:

      Comes now TAD DANA PERRY, Appellant, and files this Motion for

Rehearing before the Panel, and would show the Honorable Court as follows:

      In Appellant’s Appeal to this Honorable Court the Appellant raised three

independent grounds of error. See Brief for Appellant at 4, In the Interest of T.S.P.,

(2015) (No. 04-14-00547-CV). The first ground of error was sustained and this

Court found that due to the failure of Appellee to introduce the payment record of

the Attorney General that the trial court ruling was an “abuse of discretion” and this

Court remanded the case to the trial court for a “determination” of the amount of

child support due and owing by the Appellant. The Appellant’s second ground of

error addressed the issue of the award of arrearages for medical support. Appellant
alleged that the trial court erred in awarding medical support arrearages to the

Appellee without there being a showing that the Appellee “complied with the

written notice provisions of the various court orders that triggered Appellant’s duty

to pay increased medical support.” Id. This Court did not address that ground of

error, and it is the Appellant’s second ground of error which, respectfully, needs to

be reviewed.

      This Court additionally ruled upon the third ground of error by ruling that the

trial court’s order mandating the payment of a “civil fine” to the Appellee was also

improper and vacated the portion of the Order so mandating.

                    GROUND FOR ERROR NUMBER TWO

      The Appellant would assert that if this Court simply remands for

“determination of the amount of child support arrearages and medical support

arrearages to which [Appellee] is entitled,” without further clarification of the

issues related to the Appellee’s failure of proof, the order to remand will relay to the

trial court that this Court has concluded that Appellee is in fact entitled to the

increases in medical support and the arrearages related thereto. In the Interest of

T.S.P., No. 04-14-00547-CV, 2015 WL 5037123 (Tex. App.—San Antonio Aug.

26, 2015) (mem. op.). This is despite the fact that Appellee failed to prove at trial

that she complied with the Court Ordered conditions precedent to the said increases,

as stated in Appellant’s Ground for Error Number Two.

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      The Appellant would show that unlike Child Support which is calculated on

a regular and systematic payment schedule unrelated to the conduct of each of the

parties, the amount of Medical Support due and owing in this case is wholly

regulated by the cost of the variable health insurance premiums. Any increases in

the said premiums which may thereafter be due are set, in this case, by the

performance of conditions precedent being performed by the Appellee. The

Appellant would show that the original amount of Medical Support was calculated

at $ 197.00 in the Final Decree of Divorce (C.R. at 16). Said amount was due and

payable to the Appellee according to the tenor of the Court Orders on file at the

time that the alleged increases were due. The Decree and each subsequent Amended

Order set forth specific payment dates and amounts due. Additionally, and more

importantly, the Court ordered the Appellant to pay “50% of any increases in the

costs of insuring the child on MARSALIE PERRY’S health insurance and dental

insurance plan, beginning on the first day of the month following the date TAD

DANA PERRY receives written notice of the amount of the increase in premium

from MARSALIE PERRY” (C.R. at 93). Accordingly, there could be no increase

in the payment of the Medical Child Support unless the Appellee first properly gave

“written notice of the amount of increase in premium” to Appellant and proved

same by a preponderance of the evidence.




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      Appellant would show that the record contains direct questioning of the

Appellee related to the performance of the conditions precedent to each alleged

increase in Medical Support Payments. (R.R. at 88–89). The record further reflects

a total failure of compliance with the conditions precedent by the Appellee. The

response of Appellee that she “passed it along” to Appellant (R.R. at 89) clearly

evidences that she failed to comply with written notice. It is the burden of the

Appellee, Petitioner at trial, to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that she

complied with the written notice provisions and the conditions precedent to each

and every increase in medical premium due and payable as Medical Child Support

by the Appellant. This issue was clearly raised by Appellant in trial and never

proven or contradicted as to the failure of performance by Appellee. This Ground of

Error Number Two evidences the failure of the Appellee‘s right to recover any

arrearage based upon any increase in Medical Support Payments allegedly due and

owing.

      In order to support the arrearage award ordered by the court, the trial court

had to find that on each occasion that the Appellee alleged that an increase in

Medical Support payments was due that the Appellee had in fact complied with the

court’s Orders related to the commencement of the modified payment schedule.

This alleged modification and increased payment by Appellant could only be

brought about by the Appellee’s written compliance with the conditions precedent

                                        4
to the premium increase. The trial court implicitly found that the Appellee had in

fact complied with the conditions precedent to said increase in order for the

Attorney General’s payment record on Medical Support to be accurate. It is this

implicit finding of performance that, if not properly addressed by this Court, that

will be relied upon by Appellee to simply introduce the Attorney General payment

record as “proof” of the amounts due and owing for both Child Support and

Medical Support. Unless the trial court so found by a preponderance of the evidence

there could be no increase in Medical Support payments due and accordingly, there

could be no arrearage based upon the increased payments due.

      As a result, the Attorney General payment record cannot be the basis for

simple “recalculation” of the Medical Support arrearages due as the amounts

reflected therein are based upon the supposed compliance with Court ordered

increases in Medical Support payments which don’t exist in the record.

      On remand, the trial court’s determination of Medical Support Payments due,

unlike Child Support, is not a mere question of arrearage “recalculation” based

upon the Attorney General payment record. The payment record cannot be relied

upon for the reason being that the record does not distinguish how each respective

payment is applied, nor whether the increases in medical support were legally

payable. The Attorney General payment record merely identifies the amount

received by the Attorney General’s Office and the date of the receipt of those funds.

                                         5
The payment record therefore does not identify whether the payments received were

applied to Child Support accrual or to Medical Support accrual, nor does the record

identify what arrearages remain, if any at all. There is no calculation of any increase

to Medical Support, nor does the payment record identify the original amount of

Medical Support due. The record will reflect that the payment record of the

Attorney General contains within its calculation only the amounts received from the

Appellant (C.R. at 138–42), not what amounts are due for Medical Support.

      Further, the record will reflect that Appellee agreed that the payment record

does not reflect “what amount of money was paid to child support or what amount

of money was paid to health insurance” (R.R. at 95–96). Therefore, the simple

remand for the proper calculation of the amount of support allegedly due and owing

would be tantamount to a finding that the Appellee properly proved up the

conditions precedent to the increases in Medical Support on each and every

occasion which the payment record of the Attorney General reflects.

       Appellee should not have the opportunity to make an additional attempt at

providing sufficient proof of an increase in payment amount or the arrearages

related to medical support. As stated earlier, unlike Child Support payments, the

Medical Support payments can only be calculated upon proof of the compliance

with the Court orders related thereto. Appellant would assert that there can be no




                                          6
retroactive increases in Medical Support payments or arrearages based thereon

without proof of compliance at the time the payments were due.

                                PRAYER FOR RELIEF

      WHEREFORE, Appellant asks that this Court determine that Appellee failed

to show compliance with conditions precedent and to remand to the trial court with

an order denying relief for any arrearages related to premium increases over and

above any amount not supported by written orders.

      Appellant prays for any and all further relief at law or equity to which he may

show himself justly entitled.

                                             Respectfully submitted,
                                             ROBERT BARRERA P.C.
                                             424 East Nueva
                                             San Antonio, Texas 78205
                                             Telephone: (210) 244-5811
                                             Facsimile: (210) 224-5890

                                                    /S/
                                             ROBERT J. BARRERA
                                             State Bar No. 01807500

                                             ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT
                                             TAD DANA PERRY




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                        CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE

      The undersigned hereby certifies that on the 9th day of October, 2015 a true

and correct copy of the foregoing was served on all parties in this case by fax,

email, or mail.



                                                /S/
                                            ROBERT J. BARRERA




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