Grimsley v. Grimsley

632 S.W.2d 174, 1982 Tex. App. LEXIS 4266
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 8, 1982
Docket1927
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 632 S.W.2d 174 (Grimsley v. Grimsley) 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
Grimsley v. Grimsley, 632 S.W.2d 174, 1982 Tex. App. LEXIS 4266 (Tex. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION

GONZALEZ, Justice.

This is a divorce case. After trial before the court, judgment was entered granting a divorce and awarding to wife-appellee title to a house that was purchased after the marriage with proceeds of the sale of property that wife claimed was given to her by her husband-appellant prior to the marriage. We reverse and render.

In August 1978, appellant and appellee met. On October 2, 1978, appellant proposed marriage which proposal was accepted by appellee on October 10,1978. Thereafter on October 18, 1978, appellant wrote the following letter to appellee.

“Dear Pat and intended wife,
In appreciation of your past love and affection, your present love and affection, and your future love and affection I would be extremely happy to have you accept all of the items I have listed on my schedule of personal property enclosed with this letter which consists of all of my personal possession prior to our marriage so that in the event of my death all of this will belong to you for you to do with as you wish.
Thank you Pat for being my friend and future wife.
I love you,
John”

SCHEDULE OF PERSONAL PROPERTY

Stereo System: Panasonic AM — FM stereo
Realistic turn table
Pioneer reel to reel tape deck
Akai 65-D cassette tape deck
Craig 8-track tape deck
Approximately 140 cassettes (recorded)
Approximately 10 Magell reel to reel tapes recorded
Approximately 50 Magell (90 minutes each side) blank tapes
Approximately 50 blank 8-track tapes
One stereo cabinet
Numerous albums-approximately 100 (one hundred)
Two Sterling speakers
Two smaller speakers
One Mediterranean sofa & chair
Two end tables w/two ginger-jar lamps
One Motorola color T.V.
One etagere
One recliner
One breakfast nook w/chair
One pair of binoculars
One coffee table
2000 shares of Energy Surveys stock consisting of the following:
>1000 shares of S.I.I. stock
*176 Savings account in Hub City Bank in the name of Energy Survey, account no. unknown
First mortgage on property on Breaux Bridge Highway, Lafayette, Louisiana payable $438x to Energy Surveys for 15 years
Energy Survey Funds in Hub City Bank and Trust Co. checking account no. 02-3637-3
1976 Chevrolet Caprice — Energy Survey is owed $2025 as of the date of this schedule.
One two (2) bedroom residence on Odile St., Lafayette, La., valued at $25,000— owe $10,000x
All monies in E.M.C.D. savings plan
All monies owing from Helmer Directional Drlg. profit sharing
All contents of safety deposit box including $250 worth of silver coins”

No deed or formal transfers of the real estate or stock were ever effected.

The parties were married on November 18, 1978. This was a second marriage for both of them. At the time of the marriage, appellant was 50 years old and besides being the sole owner of Energy Surveys Co., he was an employee of a drilling company. Appellee was a 39-year-old school teacher with a Master’s Degree who also was a part-time real estate salesperson. After the marriage, appellant moved into the rent house appellee was living in with her two little boys from the prior marriage.

Approximately three or four months after the marriage, the parties purchased a home in Corpus Christi Country Club Estates for Ninety Thousand Dollars ($90,-000.00). They made a down payment of Sixty Two Thousand One Hundred Forty Seven and 94/100 Dollars ($62,147.94) and assumed a loan for the balance. The money for the down payment was traced, and it was undisputed that this consideration came from the sale of the property appellant owned before the marriage to wit:

(1)Twenty Thousand Dollars ($20,000.00) cash from Energy Surveys Inc. savings account.
(2) Thirty Thousand Dollars ($30,000.00) cash transferred from Energy Surveys Inc. to appellant following a loan to Energy Surveys Inc. of Thirty Thousand Dollars ($30,000.00) by Citizens State Bank in Corpus Christi. The collateral for the Thirty Thousand Dollars ($30,000.00) loan was One Thousand (1,000) shares of Smith International Industries stock which appellant owned.
(3) Thirteen Thousand Five Hundred and 08/100 Dollars ($13,500.08) cash which is the net proceeds from the sale of appellant’s house in Louisiana.

All of these sums were deposited by appellant into a joint checking account at the Citizens State Bank in Corpus Christi during the month of February 1979. All of these transfers were made by appellant. At the time of the transfers, appellee had no authority or ability to transfer or encumber these funds nor to sell or convey appellant’s property in Louisiana. Appellee wrote the check on the parties’ joint checking account which made the down payment for the Country Club Estates house. However, both appellant and appellee were named grantees to the deed on said house.

After the purchase of the house, the parties started having marital problems. Appellant moved out. There was a brief reconciliation but again appellant moved out and the case was tried within twenty four months from the wedding date. During the marriage, the parties actually lived together not more than ten months and only seven months in the Country Club Estates home. The court divided the property as follows: appellee was awarded as her sole and separate property the home on Country Club Estates, all escrow funds held by the mortgage company for payment of insurance, taxes and maintenance charges on the home and her community interest in the house; a property located at 717 Ponder Street, all oil and gas mineral interest owned by her or in her name and the following items of personal property; all household furnishings, appliances, fixtures, wearing apparel, jewelry and other personal property in her *177

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Bluebook (online)
632 S.W.2d 174, 1982 Tex. App. LEXIS 4266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grimsley-v-grimsley-texapp-1982.