Alberto Manuel Mireles v. Morgan Hornsby Mireles

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedOctober 7, 2025
Docket0935241
StatusUnpublished

This text of Alberto Manuel Mireles v. Morgan Hornsby Mireles (Alberto Manuel Mireles v. Morgan Hornsby Mireles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alberto Manuel Mireles v. Morgan Hornsby Mireles, (Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges AtLee, Lorish and Frucci UNPUBLISHED

Argued at Norfolk, Virginia

ALBERTO MANUEL MIRELES MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0935-24-1 JUDGE RICHARD Y. ATLEE, JR. OCTOBER 7, 2025 MORGAN HORNSBY MIRELES

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF GLOUCESTER COUNTY Jeffrey W. Shaw, Judge

Douglas J. Walter (Lisa A. Mallory; Clancy & Walter, P.L.L.C., on briefs), for appellant.

Breckenridge Ingles (Martin, Ingles & Hensley, Ltd., on brief), for appellee.

This appeal involves the divorce of Alberto Mireles (“husband”) and Morgan Mireles

(“wife”).1 The circuit court granted the divorce on the grounds of adultery and entered an order

distributing the parties’ property. Husband contends that the evidence was insufficient as a matter

of law to prove that he committed adultery. He also challenges the equitable distribution award,

arguing that wife’s assault and battery of him was a negative nonmonetary contribution, that the

child tax credits claimed by wife were a marital asset, and that the circuit court erred by awarding

wife 52.5% of the marital assets. Finally, he argues the circuit court abused its discretion by

ordering him to pay $20,000 of wife’s attorney fees. For the following reasons, we disagree and

affirm the decision of the circuit court.

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). 1 We recognize that “former husband” and “former wife” are more accurate designations. Nevertheless, we use these less cumbersome titles in this memorandum opinion for ease of reference. I. BACKGROUND

Husband and wife married in October 2015, and they had two children during the marriage.

Husband served in the Navy during the marriage, causing the parties to move often. Wife worked

as an LPN for a time, but she did not work outside the home after the children were born until

March 2020, when she went back to work as an LPN. By January 2021, the parties were living in

Virginia. Husband and wife separated following an incident late at night on June 19, 2021,

extending into the early morning hours of June 20.

A. The Events Leading to the Divorce

In late April or early May 2021, husband started coming home late from work. Rather than

getting home around 5:00 p.m., he would arrive between 8:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m. When asked

about the change, husband said that “he was really busy” with things going on at work.

At some point, wife became concerned that husband was having an inappropriate

relationship with Corinna Ramos, a “junior sailor[] he supervised” at Norfolk Naval Base. She

discovered a conversation that took place in late May between husband and Ramos over Facebook

Messenger. Wife found the messages concerning because husband “said the same things to

[Ramos] that he used to tell [wife],” such as “I swear that finally being able to see you . . . is the

only reason I look forward to going to work.” She confronted husband, and he told her that he and

Ramos were “just friends.” Wife told husband that you do not tell a friend the “same things that

you would tell your wife,” and she asked him to “limit his relationship with [Ramos] to work only.”

Husband agreed, and he messaged Ramos that “after speaking with [his] wife,” his and Ramos’s

prior conversations were “completely inappropriate” and that they “should keep [their] relationship

as professional as possible.”

Ramos first responded that she could not help husband with work because she did not want

“wife to think that we have anything more than a work relationship!” But she later messaged

-2- husband, “I can’t believe you haven’t said anything. Some man you are! Don’t ever speak to me

again.” She then tried to call husband, but he told her he could not “feed any input into this

situation” because he did not want to escalate things. Ramos asked him why he did not tell the

truth, and he answered, “In process[.]” She responded, “I told you to control your bitch[.]”

Late on the evening of June 19, 2021, wife and husband were lying in bed with the lights

off, getting ready to go to sleep. Around midnight, husband’s phone dinged. Suspecting it was

Ramos, wife leaned over to see who it was. Husband tried to hide the phone from wife, but she saw

that it was in fact Ramos, wishing husband a happy Father’s Day. Wife got up, went downstairs,

and went outside to “cool off.”

While downstairs, wife texted Ramos. She obtained Ramos’s number from a card husband

had with his unit members’ phone numbers. She sent Ramos a message asking Ramos to stop

texting her husband in the middle of the night. Ramos responded that she had sent the same

message to “all of the men she worked with,” not just husband. Wife told Ramos to stop having

conversations with husband, but Ramos denied that anything was going on. Wife asked Ramos

about a dinner that Ramos and husband were supposedly at to celebrate Ramos as sailor of the year,

but Ramos denied having a celebration or going out to a dinner.

After the first few text messages, Ramos called wife and confronted her, asking, “[w]ho do

you think you are texting me like that.” Ramos also told wife “Bitch, you don’t know who I am. I

know where you live. Come F with me.” Wife hung up on her. Ramos attempted to call husband

several times, but he did not answer. At that point, Ramos started texting wife again and “finally

admitted to what they had been doing.”

Through text, Ramos told wife, “Actually[, w]e did go out[.] Since he doesn’t want to say

anything to me[.]” She said that she was not playing husband’s game. Wife asked if they had gone

out by themselves, and Ramos responded, “[n]umerous times[.]” She denied that they were

-3- together, but she also said, “We’re supposed to go out on Monday, but you can tell him that I’m

good[.]” Wife responded, “He said you were supposed to meet up to discuss the qual cards[.]”

Ramos “laughed” at the comment and said “On my day off? Highly unlikely[.] Whatever you want

to know, I’ll tell you[.]” Wife asked to know everything. Ramos told her that husband planned to

move out after his sister’s wedding and that he had already found a place. She also told wife, “We

were together . . . all the times you called and he didn’t answer[.]” She also said, “If he wants to lie

. . . I have proof[.]” Wife asked for the proof, and Ramos asked wife to call her. Ramos later

refused to provide proof.

At some point, husband came downstairs and was with wife outside. Wife told him to call

Ramos back. Husband did, and he put her on speakerphone. Ramos told husband to “be a man and

tell your wife the truth. Quit being a pussy and tell her that we were going to be together after your

sister’s wedding and move in together.” When wife asked if that was true, husband responded

“somewhat” before explaining that he had not been happy for a decade and he wanted to leave her

years ago. And based on information Ramos received from “credible sources,” husband did not

believe the children were his. Wife told him she had given him “numerous chances to stop this

inappropriate relationship” but that this was his “third strike” and she was reporting him to his

command. Wife asked husband to leave.

Later in the evening on June 20, husband was packing his stuff to leave. After wife put the

kids to bed, things escalated. Wife was upset that husband was only packing things like electronics,

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