Goetz, Lynn Rae Levit v. Goetz, Joseph Samuel
This text of Goetz, Lynn Rae Levit v. Goetz, Joseph Samuel (Goetz, Lynn Rae Levit v. Goetz, Joseph Samuel) 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.
Opinion
Affirmed and Opinion filed February 26, 2004.
In The
Fourteenth Court of Appeals
_______________
NO. 14-02-01164-CV
LYNN RAE LEVIT GOETZ, Appellant
V.
JOSEPH SAMUEL GOETZ, Appellee
____________________________________________________
On Appeal from the 257th District Court
Harris County, Texas
Trial Court Cause No. 99-53560
O P I N I O N
In this divorce case, Lynn Goetz appeals portions of the divorce decree (the “decree”) on the grounds that the trial court erred in: (1) securing the award of property to Joseph Goetz with a lien on property awarded to Lynn; and (2) deciding it had the authority to appoint an arbitrator, thereby modifying the terms of the parties’ mediated settlement agreement (the “MSA”). We affirm.
Lien
Lynn’s first issue argues that the trial court erred in securing the money judgment awarded to Joseph with a lien on property that had previously been partitioned to her by the parties’ mediated settlement agreement.[1] The relevant portions of the MSA pertaining to the property division contain the following language:
It is stipulated and agreed that the estate of the parties shall be divided as follows:
[Joseph] shall be awarded the following property, and [Lynn] shall be divested of all right, title, interest, and claim in and to such property:
* * * *
[Lynn] shall be awarded the following property, and [Joseph] is hereby divested of all right, title, interest, and claim in and to such property: . . . .
Despite the repeated use of “shall be” in the property division section of the MSA, Lynn contends that the one instance in which “is hereby” is used above transforms the MSA into a partition of the property that was effective, upon its execution by the parties, to change the character of their property from community to separate without approval by the court,[2] ( i.e., as contrasted from an agreement incident to a divorce that would have required a finding by the court of a just and right division of marital property in order to be effective).[3] Therefore, Lynn asserts that the lien subsequently imposed by the divorce decree on her previously partitioned separate property divested her of separate property in violation of the Texas Constitution and the laws of Texas.[4]
The first page of the MSA contains the caption for the divorce action in the trial court, and the opening paragraph states, “we stipulate and agree to the following in settlement of the following contested matters before the court in the above-captioned cause.” The second paragraph similarly recognizes, “that the Court shall enter a decree of divorce.” In addition to providing a detailed property division, the MSA addresses conservatorship of the children, and leaves several unresolved matters pertaining to both for determination by the court, including periods of possession, child support, and the amount of any money judgment payable by either party to the other.
Moreover, although the term “division” is used throughout the MSA, we are unable to find the word “partition” in it.[5] Rather, the decree states that it contains a partition of the community property of the parties and that it shall serve as a muniment of title to transfer ownership of all property awarded to any party therein. The decree also treats the MSA as being incident to the divorce by expressly incorporating it into the decree, acknowledging that the award of property to each party in the decree is in accordance with the MSA, and stating that the trial court found the division of property to be a just and right division of the parties’ marital estate. These provisions reflect a clear intent by the parties and the trial court that the MSA was an agreement incident to divorce, rather than a partition agreement. To hold otherwise would render the property division set forth in the divorce decree a nullity because the parties’ marital property would have already been partitioned in the MSA and nothing would have remained for division in the decree. Therefore, despite the “is hereby” language used in the MSA, we find no authority or rationale to conclude that such an isolated phrase can overcome the obvious intent of the MSA and decree. Accordingly, Lynn’s first issue is overruled.
Authority to Appoint Arbitrator
Lynn’s second issue contends that the trial court erred in determining, after the parties were unable to decide on an arbitrator to designate in the MSA, that the trial court had the authority to name one for them if an arbitrable dispute arose and they still could not agree on an arbitrator. In this regard, the relevant portion of the MSA states, in part:
It is further stipulated and agreed that, in the event of disputes regarding periods of possession, extracurricular activities, or rights and duties of the conservators, the parties shall submit the dispute for arbitration with _______. The arbitrator’s decision shall be binding on the parties.
(emphasis added). By contrast, the corresponding language of the decree states:
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