Daniel Lee Haining v. Thu-Dung Thi Haining

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 25, 2010
Docket01-08-00091-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Daniel Lee Haining v. Thu-Dung Thi Haining (Daniel Lee Haining v. Thu-Dung Thi Haining) 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
Daniel Lee Haining v. Thu-Dung Thi Haining, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 25, 2010







In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas





NO. 01-08-00091-CV





DANIEL LEE HAINING, Appellant


V.


THU-DUNG THI HAINING, Appellee





On Appeal from the 308th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2006-13649





MEMORANDUM OPINION



          Appellant, Daniel Lee Haining, appeals from a decree of divorce dissolving the marriage between himself and appellee, Thu-Dung Thi Haining.

          In four issues, Daniel contends that (1) “[t]he trial court improperly divested [him] of his separate property interest in the Savings Plan and IRA”; (2) “[t]he trial court abused its discretion by awarding a $100,000 penalty against [him] for wasting of community assets and fraud on the community estate”; (3) “[t]he evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support $70,189 in reimbursement to [the] community for waste”; and (4) “[t]he trial court clearly abused its discretion in effectively dividing the community estate 104% to -4% in Thu’s favor.”

          We affirm.

Summary of Facts and Procedural History

          Daniel and Thu married on February 1, 1995. They have no children. Daniel has a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering and has worked for ExxonMobil since 1989. Thu has a bachelor’s degree in accounting and works as an independent computer consultant. In 1998, they purchased a home in Pearland.

          In 2001, the couple began to experience marital discord. It is undisputed that, in 2003, Daniel began a relationship with Dr. Zhili Fu. Daniel maintains, however, that his relationship with Zhili was, at all times during his marriage, merely a friendship, and he denies that it was ever adulterous.

          Daniel testified that, in October 2003, while at a training class in Florida, he met Zhili through a mutual friend. He and Zhili spent time together touring the city and exchanged telephone numbers. Over the two months that followed, Daniel and Zhili conversed regularly.

          In December 2003, Daniel arranged for Zhili to visit him at his Pearland home. To introduce the idea to Thu, Daniel asked Zhili to send him an email, purporting to be their first contact since the training class. In her email to Daniel, Zhili asked if he remembered her and stated that she would soon be in Houston on business. Daniel forwarded the email to Thu and suggested that Zhili stay with them. Thu testified that, during Zhili’s visit, Thu was uncomfortable with the way Daniel and Zhili were interacting. After Zhili left, Thu asked Daniel not to have any further contact with her, and Daniel agreed.

          Over the two years that followed, however, Daniel and Zhili traveled to visit one another and took several trips together. It is undisputed that, in May 2004, Daniel surreptitiously traveled to Florida to attend Zhili’s graduation from pharmacy school; in October 2004, Daniel flew to Florida and visited Disney World with Zhili, then helped Zhili move to Houston by driving her back with him; in February 2005, at the end of a Disney trip with Thu, Daniel purportedly had to stay in Florida and work and Thu flew home alone, however, Zhili flew in the same day to be with Daniel; and, in September 2005, Daniel and Zhili traveled to Hawaii together.

          Days after Daniel and Zhili returned from Hawaii, Daniel asked Thu to move from their four-bedroom home in Pearland to a condominium in downtown Houston. Ultimately, Daniel and Thu leased a one-bedroom condominium next door, or very near to, Zhili’s condominium.

          In December 2005, Daniel gave Thu a Hummer SUV, which he paid cash for out of their community account. In February 2006, Thu returned from a business trip to find that Daniel was not at home. When she called him, he would not tell her where he was, except to say that he was at a friend’s house. He told her that he had left her Hummer at work, but that he would be home with it the next day. The next day, Thu saw through the panoramic windows of her condo, her Hummer being driven out of the garage at the next-door building. Thu did not confront Daniel that day. Later, rather, Thu went over to the garage and found her Hummer parked next to a car she determined was Zhili’s.

          On February 28, 2006, Thu filed an original petition for divorce, alleging insupportability. In addition, Thu sought a disproportionate division of community property, alleging, inter alia, Daniel’s fault in the break-up, his fraud on the community, and his wasting of community assets. Thu sought reimbursement and attorney’s fees. The same day, Thu filed an affidavit alleging, inter alia, that Daniel had transferred over $275,000 from their joint account at Energy Capital Credit Union (“ECCU”) to “other accounts” that were beyond her “control or access”; that Daniel was similarly transferring other community funds “to places and accounts unknown”; and that Daniel had paid $68,247.58 for a Hummer without her knowledge from funds from their joint checking account and had forged her name to the title and purchase documents. The trial court froze Daniel’s assets.

          Daniel counter-petitioned for divorce, alleging insupportability and cruel treatment by Thu. Daniel also sought a disproportionate share of the community estate, alleging in support, inter alia, Thu’s fault in the break-up, fraud, and wasting of community assets.

          In April 2007, trial to the bench ended in a mistrial. The trial court awarded $26,712.50 in attorney’s fees to Thu and lifted the freeze so that Daniel could withdraw the fees out of the community account at ECCU. Subsequently, the trial court ordered that the Hummer be sold to pay Thu’s additional attorney’s fees and her living expenses. The Hummer was sold for $50,000.

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Daniel Lee Haining v. Thu-Dung Thi Haining, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniel-lee-haining-v-thu-dung-thi-haining-texapp-2010.