Chase Allen Curtis v. Gabrielle Analisa Laplante

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 25, 2026
Docket04-24-00801-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Chase Allen Curtis v. Gabrielle Analisa Laplante (Chase Allen Curtis v. Gabrielle Analisa Laplante) 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
Chase Allen Curtis v. Gabrielle Analisa Laplante, (Tex. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Fourth Court of Appeals San Antonio, Texas MEMORANDUM OPINION

No. 04-24-00801-CV

Chase Allen CURTIS, Appellant

v.

Gabrielle Analisa LAPLANTE, Appellee

From the 454th Judicial District Court, Medina County, Texas Trial Court No. 21-09-27360-CV Honorable Daniel J. Kindred, Judge Presiding

Opinion by: Lori Massey Brissette, Justice

Sitting: Irene Rios, Justice Lori I. Valenzuela, Justice Lori Massey Brissette, Justice

Delivered and Filed: March 25, 2026

REVERSED AND REMANDED

This case involves the determination of whether the parties were engaged in an informal

marriage under Texas Family Code section 2.401. Because we find the evidence is factually

insufficient to support the trial court’s finding that an informal marriage existed, we reverse and

remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. 04-24-00801-CV

BACKGROUND

Chase Curtis and Gabriella Laplante met each other in California. In 2009, they moved to

Texas, specifically the Dallas/Fort Worth area, before ultimately settling in Hondo, Texas. In 2013,

they got engaged, publicly announcing their intention to marry on Facebook and receiving

celebratory responses from their friends and family. According to Laplante, they had planned on

having a wedding in 2016 and had even discussed using a friend’s wedding venue in Hondo, but

Laplante testified she was not in good enough health for that to happen. Instead, according to her,

they just started calling each other husband and wife. But, in October of 2020, after Laplante went

to be with family in Pennsylvania, she and Curtis broke up, and Curtis told her not to return to the

home they shared in Texas. Then, in June of 2021, Curtis wed his current wife in a ceremonial

marriage in Texas and has since had a child with his wife. After that wedding occurred, Laplante

filed for divorce asserting the two had a common-law marriage.

The trial court bifurcated the trial, hearing the evidence of informal marriage under Texas

Family Code section 2.401 first, and it concluded that an informal marriage did, in fact, exist. The

parties then went forward with the rest of the matters to be tried. After the trial was completed, the

trial court found that Curtis had acquired personal property prior to the common-law marriage and

had started a business called Curtis Custom, LLC, also before the common-law marriage. But,

based on the finding that Curtis committed adultery with his current wife and that the parties

commingled Curtis’s separate property in a way that defied segregation, the court awarded the

business to Curtis as part of the community estate and ordered an unequal distribution of the marital

estate. In so doing, Curtis contends the trial court valued the business at $500,000, far in excess of

the value testified to by the court-appointed expert witness. The trial court then awarded a ranch

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purchased by Curtis in 2018, at which he runs the business, solely to Laplante. 1 Curtis also

complains that other separate property of his was also improperly awarded to Laplante, including

an automobile and a boat.

Because all issues relating to the distribution of a marital estate are moot if we sustain

Curtis’s argument that there was insufficient evidence to support the trial court’s finding that he

and Laplante were informally married, we begin and end there. See TEX. R. APP. P. 47.1.

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

The trial court entered its final judgment on October 28, 2024. Appellant Curtis made a

timely request for Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law and, within thirty days of same, timely

filed a Notice of Past Due Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law. Because the trial court

improperly refused the filing, we abated the appeal and remanded, ordering the trial court to sign

written findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Texas Rules of Civil Procedure 297.

The trial court then issued Findings of Fact & Conclusions of Law and Curtis filed his Objections

to and Request for Additional Findings of Facts and Conclusions of Law. The trial court took no

further action. Curtis now contends this court should reverse the underlying judgment because the

trial court erred in refusing to issue additional findings of fact and conclusions of law. 2

A request for additional findings and/or conclusions may be presented if a party believes

the court’s work is deficient in some way. Zhang v. Capital Plastic & Bags, Inc., 587 S.W.3d 82,

87 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2019, pet. denied). But, a trial court’s failure to make

additional findings or conclusions does not constitute reversible error unless this failure prevents

the appellant from adequately presenting his appeal. Id.; see AME & FE Investments, Ltd. v. NEC

1 All pending motions, including Curtis’s motion for temporary orders to decrease the amount of the supersedeas bond, are dismissed as moot. 2 Because our decision turns on whether there is an informal marriage between the parties, we look only to the findings and conclusions relating to that issue.

-3- 04-24-00801-CV

Networks, LLC, 2025 WL 2715484, at *2 n.2 (Tex. App.—San Antonio September 24, 2025, no

pet.) (citing Villarreal v. Guerra, 446 S.W.3d 404, 414 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2014, pet.

denied). Thus, “[t]he controlling issue is whether the circumstances of the particular case require

the party to guess at the reasons for the trial court’s decision.” In re Marriage of C.A.S. and D.P.S.,

405 S.W.3d 373, 382 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2013, no pet.).

Curtis points to the trial court’s judgment which states that “the parties married on June 1,

2014.” However, the trial court’s subsequent findings of fact state: “Laplante and Curtis, while in

Texas beginning in January 2014 agreed they were married, lived together as husband and wife,

continually and publicly presented themselves as husband and wife, and remained in Texas.”

Because there is a conflict between findings of fact and the judgment, the findings of fact control

for appellate purposes. TEX. R. CIV. P. 299a; see, e.g., Borusan Mannesmann Pipe US, Inc. v.

Hunting Energy Servs., LLC, 716 S.W.3d 572, 575 n.2 (Tex. 2025) (per curiam) (citing Rule 299a

for same).

Thus, the issue before us is whether the record at trial is legally or factually sufficient to

support the trial court’s finding that all three elements of informal marriage were present beginning

in January of 2014. See In re J.J.F.R., 2016 WL 3944823, at *1 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2016,

no pet.). Because we cannot agree that Curtis is prevented from adequately addressing the

sufficiency issue by the court’s failure to make additional findings and conclusions, we overrule

Curtis’s first issue.

SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE

Only sixteen states out of fifty recognize an informal marriage, otherwise known as

“common-law marriage.” Texas is one of them. See TEX. FAM. CODE § 2.401. Texas will recognize

an informal marriage if the evidence demonstrates either that the parties filed a declaration of their

-4- 04-24-00801-CV

marriage with the county clerk or that “the man and the woman agreed to be married and after the

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