Barbara Sias-Chinn v. Fred Henry Chinn

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 29, 2012
Docket03-11-00128-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Barbara Sias-Chinn v. Fred Henry Chinn (Barbara Sias-Chinn v. Fred Henry Chinn) 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
Barbara Sias-Chinn v. Fred Henry Chinn, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-11-00128-CV

Barbara Sias-Chinn, Appellant

v.

Fred Henry Chinn, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BELL COUNTY, 169TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 231,933-C, HONORABLE GORDON G. ADAMS, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Following a bench trial, the district court rendered a final divorce decree ending

the thirty-four year marriage of two military retirees, Barbara Sias-Chinn and Fred Henry Chinn,

and dividing their marital property. In eight issues, Barbara1 urges that the district court erred in

awarding Fred separate-property portions of her military retirement pay, improperly restricted her

right to waive her retirement benefits in order to receive Veterans’ Administration (“VA”) disability

pay, and miscalculated the values of numerous other community assets to an extent that the overall

property division was manifestly unjust and unfair. We will modify the decree to eliminate the

restriction against Barbara waiving her military retirement pay to receive VA disability pay and, as

modified, affirm.

1 Because the parties’ surnames are similar, we refer to them by their first names to avoid confusion. Barbara and Fred were married in December 1976, and each sued the other

for divorce in 2008. The property division was tried to the district court on two separate days in

March and July 2010, and the court signed the final divorce decree in January 2011. As both parties

acknowledge on appeal, the evidence regarding the identity and value of community assets is rather

confusing, disjointed, and sometimes incomplete or inconsistent, notwithstanding expressions of

concern to that effect by the district court during trial. The state of the record appears attributable,

at least in part, to Barbara’s failure or refusal to comply with pretrial discovery requirements and

to the fact that the parties proceeded to trial with only nascent information concerning numerous

assets within her control. For example, the record reflects that despite at least one court order

compelling her to produce bank statements and other documents reflecting the value of the accounts

she controlled, Barbara had not produced account statements for periods subsequent to 2008, and

several of those were annual statements that were unaccompanied by monthly statements. On the

second day of trial, in July 2010, Barbara finally divulged what she claimed were updated balances

for some of the accounts, basing her testimony on documents she had not previously produced, a few

of which were introduced into evidence during the last hour of the trial. Barbara also claimed that

she had begun cashing her paychecks rather than depositing them into a bank account and paying

various expenses in cash.

The basic thrust of Barbara’s issues on appeal is that the state of the trial record

resulted in the district court’s dividing the community estate based on legally or factually insufficient

evidence of the identity and values of several individual assets it purported to award. Barbara further

asserts that the combined effects of the court’s “miscalculations” or “confusion” regarding individual

2 assets yielded a disproportionate property division that was manifestly unjust and unfair. Barbara

has also complained that the district court awarded Fred part of her separate-property interest in her

military retirement pay and that it erred in purporting to prohibit her from waiving her right to

military retirement pay in favor of VA disability.

We can quickly dispose of Barbara’s complaints regarding her military retirement

pay. The district court heard evidence that both Barbara and Fred had begun serving in the

U.S. Army prior to their marriage—Barbara for about three-and-a-half years and Fred for over a

decade—and that each reached retirement during the marriage, Barbara in 1995 and Fred in 1986.

The parties concur that the community estate subject to division included the portion of each party’s

military retirement benefits corresponding to the proportion of his or her total creditable service

that accrued during the marriage and that the remaining portion represented the party’s separate

property. See, e.g., Limbaugh v. Limbaugh, 71 S.W.3d 1, 16 n.12 (Tex. App.—Waco 2002, no pet.)

(explaining that community interest in retirement benefits is calculated by dividing the number of

months the parties were married during the employee spouse’s employment by the total number of

months in which the employee spouse served). In the divorce decree, the district court awarded both

Barbara and Fred “[f]ifty percent (50%) of the community interest” in the other’s military retirement

pay “and more particularly specified in the domestic relations order signed by the Court in this

cause.” However, in the domestic relations order (DRO) contemplated by the decree, and also

incorporated into it, the district court “ORDERED AND DECREED THAT FRED HENRY CHINN

have judgment against and recover from BARBARA SIAS-CHINN 50% of BARBARA SIAS-

3 CHINN’S disposable retired pay” without mentioning or distinguishing the community versus

separate property interests in that pay.2

Emphasizing the DRO’s language, Barbara urges that the district court erroneously

awarded Fred a share of her separate property, requiring reversal. See Jacobs v. Jacobs, 687 S.W.2d

731, 733 (Tex. 1985) (only community property is subject to division; a trial court cannot divest a

spouse of separate property). However, as Fred emphasizes, the decree explicitly awarded him a

share of only the community interest in Barbara’s retirement pay. To the extent the DRO exceeds

this limitation, it has no legal effect. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 9.007 (West 2006) (orders to

enforce a final divorce decree “may not alter or change the substantive division of property”; “[a]n

order . . . that amends, modifies, alters, or changes the actual, substantive division of property

made or approved in a final decree of divorce or annulment is beyond the power of the divorce court

and is unenforceable”); Shanks v. Treadway, 110 S.W.3d 444, 449 (Tex. 2003) (stating that the

district court “was without authority to enter a QDRO altering the terms of the decree”); Gainous

v. Gainous, 219 S.W.3d 97, 107 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2006, pet. denied) (stating that

the district court should have issued a clarifying QDRO because prior QDRO did not divide

property consistent with decree and, thus, was void). We can remedy any error in this discrepancy

by modifying the DRO to clarify that Fred is being awarded “50% of the community interest in

BARBARA SIAS-CHINN’S disposable retired pay.”3

2 The appellate record does not include a counterpart DRO effectuating the district court’s award to Barbara from the community interest in Fred’s retirement pay. 3 Barbara also observes that the district court did not quantify the value of the community interest in her retirement pay or determine its present value as of the time of divorce. But neither party presented evidence of what these calculations would be, instead describing these assets solely

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