Dierdre Rosensky v. Douglas Steven Rosensky

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 3, 2011
Docket01-09-01029-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Dierdre Rosensky v. Douglas Steven Rosensky (Dierdre Rosensky v. Douglas Steven Rosensky) 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
Dierdre Rosensky v. Douglas Steven Rosensky, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 3, 2011

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NO. 01-09-01029-CV

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Dierdre Rosensky, Appellant

V.

Douglas Steven Rosensky, Appellee

On Appeal from the 306th District Court

Galveston County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 08FD1973

MEMORANDUM OPINION

          Appellant, Dierdre Rosensky (“Dierdre”), appeals from a final decree of divorce from Douglas Steven Rosensky (“Douglas”).  In the decree, the trial court determined that the Rosenskys’ marital residence was community property and ordered the property to be sold and the proceeds to be divided between Dierdre and Douglas.  In one issue, Dierdre contends that the trial court erred in not classifying the residence as her separate property because the $72,000 that she used for the down payment was a gift from Douglas.

          We affirm.

Background

          Dierdre and Douglas married in 2000.  No children were born during the marriage.  In 2006, the parties purchased a home in League City for their marital residence.  In her inventory and appraisal filed in the divorce proceeding, Dierdre listed the house under the section entitled “Community Estate of the Parties” and noted that the current net equity in the property, as of May 21, 2009, was $90,978.49, “less the $72,000 that is Dierdre Rosensky’s separate property . . . .”  In the “Separate Assets of Wife” section of her inventory, Dierdre stated the following:

Description of asset:      Claim by wife’s separate estate

Basis of Claim:              Douglas Steven Rosensky gifted to Dierdre Rosensky $72,000 for a down payment on the [League City] home.

How acquired:               Gifted on April 11, 2006.

Value:                            $72,000.

Douglas, in his inventory and appraisal, listed the house as community property, noted that title to the property was in the name of “Doug and Dierdre Rosensky,” and did not assert that Dierdre had a separate property interest in the house.

          At trial, Douglas testified that he wanted the trial court to order the house to be sold and the proceeds to be divided between Dierdre and him, and he asserted that, if she wished to continue living there, she could buy out his interest in the property.  Douglas stated that he did not give Dierdre $72,000 for the down payment on the house.  Douglas testified that he wired the money for the down payment directly to the title company approximately two days before the closing.  He noted that he did not have any direct dealings with either the title company or the mortgage company and that Dierdre, who is a real estate agent, handled the transaction on their behalf.  He stated that, at the closing, he was given a stack of documents to sign and no one explained the documents to him before he signed.

          Douglas reiterated several times that he did not believe that he was making a gift to Dierdre when he wired the money and that he did not intend to make a gift to Dierdre.  When asked to explain his intent in wiring the $72,000 to the title company, he stated that he received the money through a stock sale, that Dierdre told him to make the down payment for the house, and that he wire-transferred the money to do so.  Douglas understood that the house was to be for both Dierdre and him, and he noted that the deed for the property listed both Dierdre and himself as grantees.  The trial court admitted the deed, which reflects a conveyance to both Douglas and Dierdre and does not indicate that a portion of the consideration was to be paid with Dierdre’s separate property.  Douglas did not believe that the house was a gift to Dierdrerather, he believed that he was transferring the money “to put a down payment for a married couple’s house.”

          Douglas further testified that after Dierdre placed their bid on the house she went to the mortgage company and gave the company both of their social security numbers.  She then informed Douglas that because of his previous bankruptcy his credit score was low, which would make it more difficult to get a mortgage on favorable terms.  Dierdre recommended placing the mortgage in her name alone, because with her “great credit score,” they could hopefully obtain a much better interest rate.  Douglas testified that they paid a large down payment in an additional effort to obtain a low interest rate and to keep their monthly mortgage payments low.  Douglas further testified that, if he had intended to give the $72,000 to Dierdre a gift, he would have written her a check from his checking account.

The trial court admitted a document entitled “gift letter,” dated April 11, 2006, two days before the closing, which stated the following:

I, Douglas S. Rosensky . . . do hereby certify that I have given a gift of $72,000 to my wife to be applied toward the purchase of the [League City] property. . . . I further certify that repayment is not expected or implied on this gift either in the form of cash or future services.

The document contained a signature by the donor, which Douglas confirmed “look[ed] like” his signature.  He testified, however, that he did not remember signing the document and that he “never knew that [he] signed that letter.”  Douglas stated that the first time that he saw the gift letter was at his deposition for the divorce, and he opined that the only way that he could have signed the document was if it had been placed in the stack of documents awaiting his signature at the closing. 

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Dierdre Rosensky v. Douglas Steven Rosensky, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dierdre-rosensky-v-douglas-steven-rosensky-texapp-2011.