Texas spousal maintenance is only awarded under certain specific circumstances. The Texas Family Code sets out guidelines for the duration of a spousal support order, but the obligation to pay future maintenance also terminates on the death of either party, remarriage of the former spouse receiving maintenance, or upon a…
Articles Posted in separate property
Characterization of Gifted Property in a Texas Divorce
When individuals with a high net worth marry, they often bring significant separate assets to the marriage. When marriages with complex estates end, there may be disputes over whether property is community property or the separate property of one of the spouses. The trial court in a divorce must divide…
Husband’s Inherited Home Confirmed as Separate Property Not Subject to Division in Divorce
The court in a Texas divorce case must divide the parties’ estate in a just and right manner. Tex. Fam. Code § 7.001. Complex estates may include both community and separate property, acquired from various sources. The court can only divide community property, which is any property acquired by a…
Texas Appeals Court Affirmed Divorce Decree Characterizing Property Purchased with Inheritance as Separate
Under Texas family law, community property is the property acquired by either spouse during the marriage that is not separate property. Separate property includes property a spouse owned or claimed before the marriage, property acquired by gift or inheritance during the marriage, and recovery for personal injuries, except recovery for…
Property Division Pursuant to Texas Premarital Agreement Turns on Interpretation of “Their”
Property’s characterization as either separate or community property in a Texas divorce is generally determined by its character at inception. The Texas Family Code includes a presumption that property either spouse possesses during or on dissolution is community property. Tex. Fam. Code § 3.003(a). The Code defines “community property” as…
Texas Appeals Court Husband Did Not Overcome Community Presumption in Divorce
Community property is the property acquired by other spouse during the marriage, except separate property. Tex. Fam. Code § 3.002. Separate property is generally that property the spouse owned or claimed prior to the marriage, property acquired by gift, devise, or descent during the marriage, and personal injury recoveries with…
Texas Court Rejects Wife’s Argument Husband Sold Commercial Goodwill
The court must divide marital property in a just and right manner in a Texas divorce. In some cases, the parties only have tangible or clearly identifiable assets such as real estate and back accounts. In other cases, however, there may be more abstract assets involved. A former wife recently…
Agreement Regarding Real Property During Texas Divorce
Parties to a Texas divorce may enter into an “agreement incident to divorce” regarding property division, liabilities, and spousal maintenance. If the court finds the agreement’s terms are just and right, they become binding and the court may set forth the agreement or incorporate it by reference in the final…
Texas Appeals Court Reverses Restitution and Reconstitution of Community Estate
A party to a Texas divorce is entitled to reimbursement to the marital estate when community time, labor, or skills are used to benefit the other party’s separate estate beyond what is needed for maintenance of the separate property. The trial court has broad discretion to apply equitable principles. A…
Texas Appeals Court Rejects Challenge to Jury Charge in Divorce Case
In a jury trial, the court must submit to the jury the instructions and definitions needed for it to render a verdict. The court cannot comment directly on the weight of the evidence, but an incidental comment on the weight of the evidence may be acceptable. Tex. R. Civ. P.…