in the Matter of the Marriage of Jeremy Allen Royal and Adria Rene Royal and in the Interest of a Minor Child ( 2003 )


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  •                                    NO. 07-02-0251-CV
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SEVENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    AT AMARILLO
    PANEL E
    JUNE 3, 2003
    ______________________________
    IN THE MATTER OF THE MARRIAGE OF JEREMY ALLEN
    ROYAL AND ADRIA RENE ROYAL AND IN THE INTEREST
    OF COURTNEY CHEYENNE ROYAL, A MINOR CHILD
    _________________________________
    FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT LAW NO. 2 OF LUBBOCK COUNTY;
    NO. 2001-515,444; HONORABLE DRUE FARMER, JUDGE
    _______________________________
    Before REAVIS and CAMPBELL, JJ., and BOYD, S.J.1
    OPINION
    In three points of error, appellant Jeremy Allen Royal (Jeremy) challenges the
    property division made by the trial court in dissolving his marriage to appellee Adria Rene
    Royal (Adria). He does not challenge the portion of the trial court’s judgment dissolving the
    marriage. In each of his points, Jeremy complains of the trial court’s division of the
    1
    John T. Boyd, Chief Justice (Ret.), Seventh Court of Appeals, sitting by assignment.
    Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. §75.002(a)(1) (Vernon Supp. 2003).
    couple’s home, which comprised the bulk of their community estate. Finding no reversible
    error in the trial court’s property division, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
    The parties were married in August 1994 and had a child in 1995. In 1996, they
    purchased a house in Lubbock. The details of that purchase will be later discussed in
    detail below. In October 2001, Jeremy filed suit for divorce, alleging that the marriage had
    become insupportable because of discord between the parties. Adria answered the suit
    and included a cross petition seeking divorce. Each of the parties asked to be named
    managing conservator of their daughter.
    After a bench trial, the trial court dissolved the marriage and appointed Jeremy and
    Adria as joint managing conservators of their daughter. The court found that the house
    was community property, but Jeremy was entitled to reimbursement for separate property
    contributions toward the purchase of the house. It ordered the sale of the house and that
    the proceeds be divided as follows: $20,000 to be used to pay the outstanding mortgage
    on the house, $12,850 to be paid to Jeremy as reimbursement for his separate property
    contributions, and the remainder to be divided between the parties. The thrust of Jeremy’s
    appellate challenge is directed at that portion of the property division declaring him to only
    be entitled to $12,850 reimbursement.
    The trial evidence was that in 1996, the parties sought financial assistance from
    Jeremy’s grandparents, Charles and Margaret Kay, to purchase their house. The Kays
    agreed to help and, on May 11, 1996, provided Jeremy with a $5,000 check which was
    used as an earnest money deposit. The check was signed by Margaret Kay and Charles
    2
    Kay testified it was intended as a gift to Jeremy. On May 28, 1996, the day the deal was
    closed, the parties executed a promissory note in the amount of $60,000 in favor of
    Charles, which was additionally secured by a deed of trust. The note bore interest at the
    rate of five percent per annum and provided that only interest would be paid through
    January 5, 2000, at which time a new note would be executed. Failure to execute a new
    note at that time would make the entire balance due.
    The “settlement statement” made at the closing of the house purchase shows that
    of the $73,503 required to complete the purchase price, $7,850 was paid in cash, $5,000
    came from the earnest money deposit, $60,000 advanced by the Kays, and $653 was
    credited to cover outstanding taxes on the property. When the deal was closed, $67,850
    was paid by Charles by a check made payable to Norwest Bank.2
    On January 2, 2001, Jeremy and Adria executed a renewal note in the amount of
    $20,000 to the Kays. The renewal note made reference to the original note in the amount
    of $60,000 and its original maturity date of January 5, 2000, and referred to an unpaid
    balance of $20,000 principal and interest on the original note. The same day that the
    renewal note was executed, the Kays assigned it to Aaron Royal, another of their
    grandchildren.
    At trial, Charles averred that the note and its assignment were part of a plan to
    reduce his estate for tax purposes through gifts to his grandchildren. He testified that the
    2
    The Bank’s only involvement was as the issuer of a cashier’s check in the amount
    of the Kays’ check to it.
    3
    $40,000 reduction in the house note was the result of gifts to Jeremy of $10,000 from
    himself and $10,000 from his wife to Jeremy in 2000 and, in 2001, each of them made
    another such gift. He said the transfer of the $20,000 note to Aaron was a gift to him to
    equalize the gifts from the Kays to their grandchildren.3       Jeremy also introduced a
    December 29, 2000 letter to Charles from his attorney stating that making the gifts in this
    way would allow them to be made tax free. Charles averred that was his intent in making
    the transactions.
    The trial court filed findings of fact and conclusions of law. As relevant here, the
    judge found: (number 11) there was no evidence that on January 2, 2001, Charles had
    “any intention other than forgiveness of $40,000 [debt] to both [Jeremy and Adria],” and
    (number 17) there was no evidence that the $40,000 debt forgiveness was “part of what
    [Jeremy] claims as his ‘separate’ estate.” The court made the following conclusions of law:
    (number 1) the house was community property, (number 2) the house was acquired by
    assuming community debt, and (number 3) the $40,000 debt forgiveness by the Kays was
    a gift to both Jeremy and Adria as community property and never became part of Jeremy’s
    separate estate (citing Section 3.403 of the Texas Family Code (Vernon Supp. 2003)).
    Section 7.01 of the Family Code requires a court to order a division of the parties’
    community estate in a divorce proceeding “in a manner that the court deems just and right.”
    Whether that was accomplished is the controlling question to be decided by us in reviewing
    a property division in a divorce case. Rafferty v. Finstad, 
    903 S.W.2d 374
    , 376 (Tex.
    3
    Charles testified that they had previously given another $20,000 to Aaron.
    4
    App.–Houston [1st Dist.] 1995, writ denied). In conducting our review, we must remember
    that the trial court is afforded wide discretion in dividing the marital estate and its decision
    will not be disturbed unless a clear abuse of that discretion is shown. Jacobs v. Jacobs,
    
    687 S.W.2d 731
    , 733 (Tex. 1985); Murff v. Murff, 
    615 S.W.2d 696
    , 698 (Tex. 1981).
    In this appeal, neither party argues the division of other community property affects,
    or is so intertwined with the division of the house proceeds so as to require consideration
    of other aspects of the property division. Our review, then, will be limited to the question
    actually presented, namely, whether the trial court erred in its division of the house
    proceeds.
    In his first point, Jeremy challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the
    trial court finding that the Kays’ debt forgiveness was a gift to the community, or a gift to
    Jeremy and Adria equally, rather than a gift to him as his separate property. His second
    and third points are non-substantive variations on the first point challenging the failure to
    characterize the gift as his separate property and the failure to grant his claim for economic
    contribution to the community estate. Because of their similarity, we will consider all the
    points together.
    A factual sufficiency challenge to the trial court’s findings of fact is reviewed under
    the same legal standards as factual sufficiency challenges to jury verdicts. Ortiz v. Jones,
    
    917 S.W.2d 770
    , 772 (Tex. 1996). In our review, we weigh all of the evidence and the
    findings may only be overturned if they are so against the great weight and preponderance
    5
    of the evidence as to be clearly wrong and unjust. 
    Id.
     We review the trial court’s
    conclusions of law de novo as legal questions. Piazza v. City of Granger, 
    909 S.W.2d 529
    ,
    532 (Tex. App.–Austin 1995, no writ). A conclusion of law will not be reversed unless it is
    erroneous as a matter of law. 
    Id.
    It is well established that property acquired by gift is the separate property of the
    donee. 
    Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 3.001
    (2) (Vernon 1998). When separate property is used
    to enhance the value of the community estate, including the reduction of community debt,
    the spouse whose separate property was used has an equitable right of reimbursement.
    
    Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 3.403
     (Vernon Supp. 2003); Penick v. Penick, 
    783 S.W.2d 194
    ,
    196 (Tex. 1988). A right of reimbursement is not a property right, but is an equitable claim
    within the discretion of the trial court in making a just and right division of the community
    estate. Beard v. Beard, 
    49 S.W.3d 40
    , 56 (Tex.App.–Waco 2001, pet. denied). The
    parties agree that the house was purchased with the $12,850 cash payment and the
    execution of the $60,000 purchase money note. They also agree that the Kays made gifts
    of $40,000 by crediting the $60,000 note with that much. They disagree as to whom the
    $40,000 gifts were made.
    In support of his position that the entire $40,000 was a series of gifts to him, Jeremy
    cites the trial evidence that the Kays knew there were problems in the marriage that existed
    before the gifts were made, as well as Charles’s unequivocal testimony that he intended
    the gifts to be made to Jeremy individually. He also notes the absence of any testimony
    that Charles had any other intent as well as the inference that the transaction was a gift
    6
    because Jeremy was the Kay’s grandson and what he describes as the “natural bounty of
    their affection.” Jeremy also argues that Adria’s testimony that she “assumed” half of the
    gifts were to her is no actual evidence of the Kays’ intent.
    Adria argues that Jeremy failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence that the
    gifts from the Kays were his separate property. She also argues that the evidence on the
    question was conflicting and the trial court’s resolution that the gifts were to both parties
    equally was within the bounds of its discretion as the trier of fact. She also cites her
    testimony that Charles never informed them that the $40,000 debt reduction was intended
    as a gift to Jeremy alone. She additionally notes that there is an absence of any written
    evidence of Charles’s intent or of any gift to Jeremy in 2000.
    In our discussion of Jeremy’s points, we initially note that we do not agree with Adria
    that Section 3.03 of the Family Code places the burden on Jeremy to establish by clear
    and convincing evidence that the gifts from the Kays were his separate property. Section
    3.03 establishes that there is a presumption that property possessed by spouses at the
    time of a dissolution of marriage is community property and, to overcome that presumption,
    a party must establish its separate property nature by clear and convincing evidence. 
    Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 3.003
     (Vernon 1998). The gifts with which we are concerned do not fall
    within the classification of “property possessed . . . during or on dissolution of marriage.”
    The property in question is the parties’ house, which both agree is community property.
    To the degree each party claimed an equitable right of reimbursement because of
    7
    contributions reducing the debt on the house, they bore the burden of establishing their
    respective claims. 
    Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 3.403
     (Vernon Supp. 2003).
    Jeremy specifically challenges the trial court findings of fact numbers 11, 16 and 17.
    In its finding of fact 11, the trial court found that on January 2, 2001, “there is nothing in the
    record to indicate [Mr. Kay had] any intention other than the forgiveness of $40,000 to both
    [Jeremy] and [Adria].” We agree with Jeremy that Charles’s testimony is some evidence
    that he did not intend the debt forgiveness to be a gift to both parties equally. However,
    that was not the only evidence on the issue and in its capacity as finder of fact, the trial
    judge was not required to accept Charles’s testimony as dispositive of the case. See
    McGalliard v. Kuhlmann, 
    722 S.W.2d 694
    , 697 (Tex. 1986).
    Finding 16 was that there was no evidence that Jeremy “contributed anything” or
    had advance notice of Charles’s intent to forgive $40,000 of the couple’s debt. We do not
    perceive how this finding is reversibly material to the trial court’s division of the property.
    Tex. R. App. P. 44.1(a).
    In its finding 17, the trial court found that “there is no evidence that any part of the
    $40,000 forgiven [sic] of the note was ever part of [Jeremy’s] ‘separate’ estate.”4 This
    finding is in error. First, Charles’s testimony that he had given gifts to Jeremy was not so
    weak as to be a mere surmise or suspicion of a fact; thus, it constituted some evidence of
    a separate property gift. Second, the finding is contrary to Texas law. As Jeremy points
    4
    This finding is mirrored in conclusion of law 5.
    8
    out, Texas courts consistently hold that gifts to spouses jointly are not community property,
    rather, each spouse takes half of the gift as their separate property. See, e.g., Dutton v.
    Dutton, 
    18 S.W.3d 849
    , 852 (Tex. App.–Eastland 2000, pet. denied); McLemore v.
    McLemore, 
    641 S.W.2d 395
    , 397 (Tex. App.–Tyler 1982, no writ). See also 
    26 U.S.C. § 2503
    (b)(1) (excluding from gift taxes the first $10,000 of gifts made to any person during
    a calender year) (emphasis added). That state of the law also requires us to sustain
    Jeremy’s challenge to the trial court’s conclusion of law 3, which mirrored finding of fact 17.
    We next consider the $12,850 awarded to Jeremy as “reimbursement” for his
    separate property contribution. It is well established that when separate property is used
    to acquire property during marriage and title is taken in the names of both spouses, the
    spouse who contributed the separate property is presumed to have made a gift of half of
    the separate funds to the other spouse unless rebutted by evidence clearly establishing
    that there was no intention to make a gift. Cockerham v. Cockerham, 
    537 S.W.2d 162
    ,
    168 (Tex. 1975); In re Marriage of Thurmond, 
    888 S.W.2d 269
    , 273 (Tex.App.–Amarillo
    1994, writ denied). The presumption of gift arises because it is not possible for a spouse
    to make a gift to the community estate. Id. at 273, n.1. There is no evidence in this record
    that Jeremy did not intend to make a gift.
    As we noted in Thurmond, the use of separate property in the acquisition of
    community property, as opposed to merely enhancing the value of the community property,
    gives the contributing spouse equitable title to the extent the contribution was not a gift to
    the other spouse. Id. at 273. Thus, Jeremy’s $12,850 was not an economic contribution
    9
    under Section 3.401 of the Family Code. Id. However, Adria did not argue to the trial court
    nor does she contend here that the trial court erred in its characterization of this amount,
    neither does she contend that the $12,850 award divested her of separate property. That
    being true, any error in making this award has been waived. Tex. R. App. P. 33.1.
    Our holding that the challenged findings of fact are not supported by the record does
    not end our task. This is true because if the trial court’s holding is correct on any theory
    applicable to the case, it must be affirmed. In re Marriage of Braddock, 
    64 S.W.3d 581
    ,
    585 (Tex. App.–Texarkana 2001, no pet.).
    Reiterated, Jeremy argues the evidence establishes the $40,000 debt forgiveness
    resulted from a series of gifts from the Kays, while Adria contends the evidence shows the
    gifts were made to her and Jeremy equally, making the trial court’s equal division of the
    proceeds from the sale of the house appropriate.
    Adria correctly notes that a party seeking to prove a gift must establish three
    elements: 1) intent to make a gift; 2) delivery of the property; and 3) acceptance of the
    property. In re Estate of Hamill, 
    866 S.W.2d 339
    , 344 (Tex. App.–Amarillo 1983, no writ).
    See also Akin v. Akin, 
    649 S.W.2d 700
    , 703 (Tex. App.–Fort Worth 1983, writ ref’d n.r.e.)
    (gift must be “fully executed by delivery” to be effective). Charles Kay’s testimony of his
    intent in and of itself is not sufficient to establish the gifts. Here, there is no evidence of
    the delivery of any gift to Jeremy in 2000. The only evidence of delivery and acceptance
    is the renewal note executed by the parties in January 2001.
    10
    Jeremy has not shown any exception to the delivery requirement that would justify
    the trial court to give effect to Charles’s stated intent by recognizing the January 2001 gifts
    as having been made in 2000. While federal tax law does not govern the character of
    these gifts, it is worth noting that 
    26 U.S.C. § 2503
     excludes the first $10,000 of gifts made
    by a person “during the calender year.” It contains no mechanism to deem a gift made in
    one year as having been made in a prior year. Compare, 
    26 U.S.C. § 219
    (f)(3) (allowing
    contributions to individual retirement accounts made before April 15 to be designated as
    having been made during the prior year). The record before us does not permit any other
    conclusion than the $40,000 gifts were made in 2001.
    The evidence concerning the Kays’ intent was conflicting.           Adria’s testimony
    controverted that of Charles that he told both parties that he and his wife were making gifts
    to Jeremy alone. Moreover, in addition to Charles’s testimony of his intent to make gifts,
    the record contains uncontroverted evidence of his intent to avoid gift taxes. Although the
    record does not expressly show whether the Kays paid gift taxes on their gifts, from
    Charles’s testimony that he treated the gifts as consisting of $20,000 given in 2000 and
    $20,000 given in 2001, it is a reasonable surmise that he viewed the gifts as falling within
    the $10,000 per year exemptions.
    Given Charles’s intent to avoid gift taxes, and the evidence establishing that the
    whole $40,000 was given in 2001, the trial court could have reasonably concluded that the
    Kays’ gifts were to both Jeremy and Adria. Moreover, equity does not support Jeremy’s
    argument that the trial court was obligated to resolve the conflicting evidence in favor of
    11
    finding all of the Kays’ gifts were to him alone. To do so would be to permit Jeremy and
    the Kays to utilize Adria’s gift tax exemption at the time of the gifts, but to preclude her from
    benefitting from those gifts upon the dissolution of the marriage.
    Our holding that the gifts consisted of $20,000 to each spouse as their separate
    property does not require a reformation of the court’s decree to expressly provide that each
    of the parties had a $20,000 right of reimbursement in the proceeds from the house. The
    decretal provision that those proceeds be equally divided sufficiently protects each party’s
    reimbursement claims.
    Finally, we address Jeremy’s claim that he was divested of his separate property
    because the trial court required the expenses of the house sale be deducted before the
    remainder be paid to the parties.         That is so, he argues, because the economic
    contribution, § 3.403 of the Family Code, granted him an “equitable lien” securing his
    interest in the property.    We disagree.      Jeremy failed to cite any authority for the
    proposition that a separate property interest must be recovered before any sale costs.
    Additionally, an equitable lien authorized by Family Code § 3.403 is just that, a lien. It is
    not a property interest, separate or otherwise, and the legislature specifically provided no
    property interest was created by the subchapter authorizing equitable liens for economic
    contribution. See § 3.404(b). Without a separate property interest arising from Jeremy’s
    claim for economic contribution, there can be no prohibited divestiture.
    12
    In summary, for the foregoing reasons, each of Jeremy’s points are overruled and
    the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
    John T. Boyd
    Senior Justice
    13
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 07-02-00251-CV

Filed Date: 6/3/2003

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021