Alice Lucille Nelson v. James Blackburn Nelson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 23, 2008
Docket03-05-00534-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Alice Lucille Nelson v. James Blackburn Nelson (Alice Lucille Nelson v. James Blackburn Nelson) 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
Alice Lucille Nelson v. James Blackburn Nelson, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-05-00534-CV

Alice Lucille Nelson, Appellant



v.



James Blackburn Nelson, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF WILLIAMSON COUNTY, 395TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 02-2162-F395, HONORABLE MICHAEL JERGINS, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N



The trial court signed a final decree granting a divorce to appellee James Blackburn Nelson and appellant Alice Lucille Nelson and dividing the couple's property between them. On appeal, Ms. Nelson raises five issues complaining of the trial court's division of the couple's estate and of the court's denial of her claim of assault. Mr. Nelson has filed a brief asserting several cross-issues. We reverse the trial court's decree in part and remand the cause for a new property division.



Factual and Procedural Background

The Nelsons married in late May 1989. About thirteen years later, Mr. Nelson filed his petition for divorce seeking a disproportionate share of the community estate and to have the community estate reimburse his separate estate for expenditures made to benefit the community. He also sought to have Ms. Nelson's separate estate reimburse the community estate for expenditures that benefitted her separate property. Ms. Nelson filed a counter-petition asserting cruelty by Mr. Nelson and seeking a disproportionate share of the community estate due to the parties' future employability and her claim that Mr. Nelson was at fault for the breakdown of the marriage.

At the conclusion of a hearing on temporary orders, the trial court stated that the purpose of temporary orders is to preserve the status quo, not to make a just and right property division, and that "[t]he status quo is that those accounts just stay right there, except for reasonable and normal living expenses and attorney's fees." The court noted that the couple had owned a $100,000 E-Trade account and a $90,000 Bank of America ("BoA") account in the recent past, but by the time of the hearing, Ms. Nelson had withdrawn more than half of that money, leaving only $81,500 of the original $190,000. The court said, "I don't know where that $80,000 went, and I don't believe that she had reasonable and necessary living expenses . . . in the last year of $88,000." The court found that Ms. Nelson had dissipated about "seventy, fifty [sic] thousand dollars in community assets for her own benefit," told her to prepare an accounting of her expenditures in the last four months, and ordered her to pay $60,000 to Mr. Nelson to compensate him for her misuse of the community's funds. The court also required both parties to keep records of their expenditures in the future and not to sell, transfer, or move any assets or property by any method.

Several months later, the trial court signed a temporary order setting out and memorializing the terms announced from the bench. Each party was ordered to provide an accounting of all monies spent in the last nine months and to maintain a ledger of any future cash transactions of $200 or more, and Ms. Nelson was ordered to pay $60,000 to Mr. Nelson. The parties were enjoined from selling, destroying, or tampering with any property and from "[i]ncurring any indebtedness, other than legal expenses in connection with this suit, except as specifically authorized by order of this Court." Each party was "authorized only" to "engage in acts reasonable and necessary to the conduct of [his or her] usual business and occupation," "make withdrawals . . . only for the purposes authorized by this Court's order," and "make expenditures and incur indebtedness for reasonable attorney's fees and expenses in connection with this suit" or "for reasonable and necessary living expenses."

There was testimony (1) that when the parties married in May 1989, Mr. Nelson had been employed by Lockheed Martin since late 1979, and Ms. Nelson had been employed by the I.R.S. since about 1975. Mr. Nelson retired in July 1990, and Ms. Nelson retired in September 1996. Mr. Nelson testified that he bought a house about three years before marrying Ms. Nelson and that he sold it during the marriage, making about $14,000 or $15,000 in profit. At the time of the marriage, Ms. Nelson also owned a house that she sold during the marriage for about $12,000 in profit. Mr. Nelson testified that they both used their separate proceeds from their respective home sales to buy a residence together. Mr. Nelson testified that in addition to using those profits, they also used $22,000 from his Lockheed IRA to make the down payment. Mr. Nelson asked that Ms. Nelson be reimbursed $12,000 and that he be reimbursed about $37,000 for their respective separate contributions to the first house they bought together. At the time of the divorce, the Nelsons owned two homes, one in Georgetown and one in Rockwall.

Mr. Nelson testified that he first realized the marriage was in trouble in May 2002. Ms. Nelson began spending more and more time in the Rockwall area with her daughter and grandchildren, becoming cold and aloof toward Mr. Nelson. Later in the summer of 2002, Mr. Nelson noticed that some financial documents such as bank statements "were beginning to disappear." He asked Ms. Nelson to return them, and she "first denied that she took anything, and then, subsequently, she said that that was her property and she wasn't going to bring it back."

Mr. Nelson testified that in August and September 2002, he and Ms. Nelson had about $109,000 in their E-Trade account (2) and about $81,000 in their BoA account. He had an IRA worth about $50,000, and Ms. Nelson had an IRA, started before the marriage, that was worth about $30,000 and to which $2,000 of community funds were added in 1997. Ms. Nelson also had an IRS annuity, half of which, approximately $150,000, remained at the time of the final hearing.

In November 2002, at Ms. Nelson's urging, the Nelsons decided to take a cruise with several other couples. Shortly before leaving on the cruise, Ms. Nelson went to see her daughter for about a week. Mr. Nelson testified that during that week, he noticed that the silver had been removed from the house, including their silver flatware for twelve and fifteen to twenty bowls and trays, and that when Ms. Nelson returned, she was "very cold, very aloof, kept to herself a lot and spent an inordinate amount of time on the telephone with her daughter." Ms. Nelson said that it was she who noticed things were missing over a period of several months leading up to the cruise, such as glassware and silver items, and that she thought Mr. Nelson's daughter had taken them. (3)

While the Nelsons were on the cruise, a neighbor called Mr. Nelson and told him that a moving van was in front of the Nelsons' house and that Ms. Nelson's daughter, Barbara Jenkins-Sanders, was at the house overseeing the moving company. On Mr. Nelson's request, the neighbor went to the Nelsons' house and told the moving company that Mr. Nelson had not consented to their activities. While he was talking to the neighbor, Ms. Nelson repeatedly "clicked off the phone," forcing Mr. Nelson to eventually go to the purser's office to use the ship's phone. When Mr. Nelson asked her about her daughter's activity, Ms.

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Alice Lucille Nelson v. James Blackburn Nelson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alice-lucille-nelson-v-james-blackburn-nelson-texapp-2008.