Andrew Campbell v. Leigh Campbell

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 16, 2011
Docket01-10-00562-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Andrew Campbell v. Leigh Campbell (Andrew Campbell v. Leigh Campbell) 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
Andrew Campbell v. Leigh Campbell, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion issued June 16, 2011

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

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NO. 01-10-00562-CV

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Andrew Campbell, Appellant

V.

Leigh Campbell, Appellee

On Appeal from the 359th Judicial District Court

Montgomery County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 06-02-00983-CV

MEMORANDUM OPINION

          Appellant, Andrew Campbell, challenges the trial court’s order awarding, appellee, Leigh Campbell, damages in the amount of $26,671.00 and attorney’s fees for Andrew’s failure to comply with the trial court’s underlying divorce decree.  In two issues, Andrew contends that the evidence “does not support” the trial court’s award of damages and attorney’s fees. 

          We affirm.

Background

          On July 23, 2008, the trial court signed an agreed final divorce decree, dividing the parties’ assets and liabilities.  In its division of the parties’ marital estate, the trial court awarded Andrew, among other things, 100% interest in the “Texas limited liability company known as G.L.F.L.P.I., L.L.C . . . subject to the requirement that the property known to the parties as the ‘Carlton Woods Lot’ . . . be sold” and the net proceeds of the sale be distributed 60% to Leigh and 40% to Andrew.  The trial court ordered that Andrew “pay, as a part of the division of the estates to the parties, and . . . indemnify and hold [Leigh] and her property harmless from any failure to so discharge,” all “encumbrances, ad valorem taxes, liens, assessments, or other charges due” or that became “due on the real and personal property awarded” to him.  This included any and all liabilities arising out of or in connection with any and all business interests, such as interests in limited liability companies awarded to him in the divorce decree.  The court further ordered Andrew to keep Leigh “fully informed” as to the “ongoing status of the process of selling the ‘Carlton Woods Lot’ through the closing and funding of the sale, and including without limitation advance notice of the date, time and location of the sale closing.” 

          In the order, the trial court defined “net sales proceeds” as “the gross sales price less cost of sale and full payment of any mortgage indebtedness or liens on the ‘Carlton Woods Lot,’ and reimbursement of any ‘Pre-Sale Expenditures’” to the parties.  The court ordered that if “either party makes any payments of principal, interest, taxes, or insurance” on the lot before the closing of its sale, that party would be reimbursed 100% for any such payments.  It further ordered that Andrew, within three business days after the receipt of any written request by Leigh, furnish to her “written information from the lienholder on the ‘Carlton Woods Lot’ regarding the then current standing of payments due on the note secured by the ‘Carlton Woods Lot.’”

On March 16, 2009, Leigh filed a “Motion for Enforcement of Final Decree of Divorce” in the trial court, asking it to enforce the divorce decree and order Andrew “to pay the monies owed on ‘The Carlton Woods Lot’ immediately and to do anything else necessary to prevent this property from foreclosure.”  In the alternative, Leigh requested that the trial court order Andrew “to pay her 60% of the appraised value of ‘The Carlton Woods Lot.’’ 

At the hearing on Leigh’s motion, Paul Petticrew, the realtor hired by Andrew to sell the Carlton Woods Lot, testified that he originally listed the property for sale at $665,000 and, after he did not receive any offers to buy the property, he reduced the price to $615,000.  Still, no one offered to buy the property.  Petticrew explained that had he sold the property, he would have received a 6% commission of the sales price and there would have been additional “closing costs,” which are generally 3% of the sales price.   

Leigh testified that she had recently had the property appraised and, in her opinion, the property was worth $600,000.  She noted that her opinion of value was “sustained . . . by what [she] engaged the appraiser to do.”  Leigh noted that the property went into foreclosure and was sold for $425,000 at the foreclosure sale, with a total amount of $556,215 due on the property. 

On November 6, 2009, the trial court issued rulings on Leigh’s motion, finding that:

1.       ANDREW W. CAMPBELL failed to pay the loan payments to Woodforest National Bank on “The Carlton Woods Lot” (paragraph H-10 of the Agreed Final Decree of Divorce (signed by this Court on July 23, 2008) in violation of paragraph HD-2 of the Agreed Final Decree of Divorce (signed by this Court on July 23, 2008).

IT IS THE FINDING OF THIS COURT that ANDREW W. CAMPBELL is in contempt of the Agreed Final Decree of Divorce (signed by this court on July 23, 2008). 

The trial court then requested that each party submit a brief memorandum with a recommendation as to the sanctions that it should impose on Andrew for the loss of the Carlton Wood’s Lot.

          After submission of the parties’ memoranda, the trial court issued an order, listing its findings as follows:

ANDREW CAMPBELL is in violation of paragraph H-10 of the Agreed Final Decree of Divorce (signed by this Court on July 23, 2008).

Payment of the net sales proceeds awarded to LEIGH CAMPBELL in the decree is no longer specifically possible and not an adequate remedy.

A money judgment in the amount of the damages caused by that failure to pay the loan payments is appropriate and allowed by law.

The Court further found that,

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Andrew Campbell v. Leigh Campbell, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrew-campbell-v-leigh-campbell-texapp-2011.