Abernathy v. Fehlis

911 S.W.2d 845, 1995 Tex. App. LEXIS 2983, 1995 WL 688659
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 22, 1995
Docket03-93-00523-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 911 S.W.2d 845 (Abernathy v. Fehlis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abernathy v. Fehlis, 911 S.W.2d 845, 1995 Tex. App. LEXIS 2983, 1995 WL 688659 (Tex. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

POWERS, Justice.

THE CONTROVERSY

The trial court declared in its decree that Daniel’s adultery caused the “breakup” of the marriage and justified a disproportionate division of the parties’ community property. On that ground, the trial court divided as follows the parties’ community property and joint obligations:

Personal Property
Retirement benefits
Savings
Interest
Home
Home-mortgage debt
Tax debt
$52,061 $-35,589
Lori Daniel
$ 4,235 $ 1,430
$ 2,263 3,298
850 850
2,713 2,713
42,000 -0-
-0- -43,000
-0- 880

In addition, the decree confirms Lori’s separate-property title to personal property worth $4,350 and Daniel’s separate-property title to real and personal property worth something over $146,449. The trial court has not found these amounts nor the amounts shown in the table above. We have taken the amounts indicated from Daniel’s evidence for purposes of discussion.

Daniel appeals on four points of error challenging the division of community property and joint obligations as set out in the table.

DISCUSSION AND HOLDINGS

In his third point of error, Daniel complains the trial court erred in excluding his evidence that Lori refused to have sexual intercourse with him, arguing that this placed her equally at fault in the dissolution of the marriage. For purposes of discussion only, we will assume as true Daniel’s contention that the parties were both at fault. This renders any error harmless and we overrule the point of error.

In his fourth point of error, Daniel complains that the provisions of the decree pertaining to the home and home-mortgage debt unlawfully divest him of his separate property. See Tex. ConstAnn. art. XVI, § 15 (1876); Tex.Fam.Code Ann. § 3.63 (1993); Cameron v. Cameron, 641 S.W.2d 210, 213 (Tex.1982). These contentions refer to the following events:

During their marriage, Daniel and Lori purchased a home with the proceeds of a $45,000 loan from Daniel’s father. In evidence of the debt, they executed and delivered their promissory note in the indicated amount, payable in installments and secured by a deed-of-trust lien. They made installment payments until shortly before the father died in 1990, reducing the debt to about $43,000. Shortly after Lori filed her divorce action, the father’s executor assigned to Daniel the deed-of-trust lien “as his separate property” and “[i]n accordance with Article Five of the Last Will and Testament of [Daniel’s father] which forgives any and all debts due and owing him by his son, Daniel.” Neither the note nor the will are in evidence. The evidence does not show whether the note was a negotiable instrument or a simple con *847 tract to pay money. Nor is the deed of trust in evidence. The gist of Lori’s testimony is that she believed the father forgave the debt before he died. The substance of Daniel’s testimony is that the father agreed merely to a temporary suspension of installment payments before he died and that Daniel inherited the mortgage.

The decree awards Lori the home “free and clear of any and all liens or obligations,” divests Daniel “of all right, title, interest, and claim in and to such property,” confirms that the mortgage is Daniel’s separate property, but requires him to pay the obligation and holds Lori harmless thereon. Daniel contends the cumulative effect of these provisions is to destroy the mortgage as an article of property and thus to deprive him of a separate-property asset acquired by inheritance from his father.

While owned by the father or another stranger to the marriage, the mortgage was an item of property attended by rights that could not be taken away or diminished by a court except in an action brought for the purpose. There is no doubt that Daniel inherited the mortgage. It is therefore his separate property. Daniel was not, however, a stranger to the marriage. He and Lori made the mortgage during coverture and he inherited it during that period. The father’s act of forgiving Daniel’s liability on the debt, but not Lori’s, and giving Daniel the mortgage as an obligation enforceable against Lori, did not convert the mortgage into Lori’s obligation alone so far as Daniel’s and Lori’s relations inter se were concerned. 1 The obligations of co-makers, as between themselves, derive from their contractual or other relationship, and may not be altered by an act of their obligee. See 10 C.J.S. Bills and Notes § 87, 466-67 (1938); 11 Am.Jur.2d Bills and Notes §§ 588, 655-56 (1963). Therefore, the mortgage remained a joint obligation existing at the time of the divorce, insofar as Daniel and Lori were concerned. The partition ordered by the trial court may have the effect of rendering the mortgage practically valueless in Daniel’s hands, but the decree does not deprive him of any vested right in the mortgage because, being a subsisting joint obligation when he inherited it, he took the mortgage (as an asset) subject to the trial court’s power to partition it as a joint obligation. Tex.Fam.Code Ann. § 3.63(a). We overrule the point of error.

In his second point of error, Daniel contends the division of community property and joint obligations is so disproportionate and inequitable as to constitute an abuse of discretion. He refers to the fact that the decree awards Lori property valued at $52,-061 while assigning Daniel property and liabilities that result in a negative value, or net liability, of $35,589. Indeed, the decree required that he pay all of the parties’ joint obligations totalling $43,880. Nevertheless, the proposition that Daniel must pay the home mortgage debt of $43,000 is a patent fiction. In actuality, he is not required to pay that sum because it is a debt that was extinguished by his father’s forgiveness of the debt, so far as he is concerned, and he cannot enforce any obligation against himself. The fiction is tenable and useful only as a means of arguing against the decree provisions that Lori need not pay Daniel any sum by reason of the mortgage even though the decree awards the home to her.

Concerning the trial court’s power in the matter, we point out that it lies within that court’s discretion to award one spouse the bulk of the parties’ community assets while requiring the other spouse to pay the bulk of their joint obligations, so long as the disparity is justified by the circumstances.

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Bluebook (online)
911 S.W.2d 845, 1995 Tex. App. LEXIS 2983, 1995 WL 688659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abernathy-v-fehlis-texapp-1995.