Henry Hutcherson III v. Tina Hutcherson

CourtTexas Court of Appeals, 3rd District (Austin)
DecidedMarch 19, 2026
Docket03-24-00297-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Henry Hutcherson III v. Tina Hutcherson (Henry Hutcherson III v. Tina Hutcherson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Court of Appeals, 3rd District (Austin) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henry Hutcherson III v. Tina Hutcherson, (Tex. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-24-00297-CV

Henry Hutcherson III, Appellant

v.

Tina Hutcherson, Appellee

FROM THE 20TH DISTRICT COURT OF MILAM COUNTY NO. CV40919, THE HONORABLE JOHN YOUNGBLOOD, JUDGE PRESIDING

OPINION

Before marrying, appellant Henry Hutcherson III (Hank) and appellee

Tina Hutcherson (Tina) entered into a premarital agreement (PMA), which delineated each

spouse’s separate property and governed the division of their marital estate in the event of divorce.

Tina filed for divorce in 2021, and following a bench trial, the court entered a final divorce decree

in which it dissolved the parties’ marriage on the ground of insupportability, found the PMA to be

valid and enforceable, and confirmed the parties’ separate property. The trial court awarded Tina

a $900,000 judgment against Hank as “part of the division of community property between the

parties” and ordered Hank to pay $5,000 per month in spousal maintenance for a period of ten

years. On appeal, Hank contends that the trial court abused its discretion by imposing the $900,000

judgment and spousal-maintenance order. We affirm in part and reverse in part the trial court’s

final divorce decree. BACKGROUND

Tina filed a divorce petition in which she requested spousal maintenance and a

disproportionate share of the community estate based on claims of reimbursement and fraud on

the community. The divorce was tried to the bench on November 20, 2023. Both parties testified

about their marriage, their separate and community property, and how the PMA affected the

community estate’s development. At the time of trial, Hank and Tina had no minor children.1

The PMA recited that Hank and Tina had fairly disclosed their assets and liabilities

to each other, that each had or “reasonably could have had adequate knowledge of the property

and financial obligations of the other party,” and that each “voluntarily and expressly waived in

writing any right to further disclosure.” Both parties were represented by independent counsel in

connection with the agreement, expressed an understanding of its terms, and signed it after

executing a “waiver of disclosure of financial information.”2 Under the PMA, funds deposited in

the parties’ joint accounts were designated community property, and the parties were required to

deposit their salaries into one or more of the joint accounts. Hank’s salary was defined as the

lesser of “$60,000 per year” or “1/2 of the profits of Accurate, Inc.,” his separate property business.

The PMA incorporated handwritten schedules listing each party’s separate

property; Hank’s Accurate shares were expressly characterized as his separate property. All

income or property generated by separate property was to retain the generating property’s separate

character, and the PMA specifically provided, “Monies distributed from a separate property asset,

1 When Hank and Tina married, each had a child from a prior relationship. They had two children together. 2 The copy of the Waiver of Disclosure of Financial Information included in the record was signed only by Tina. 2 such as Accurate, Inc, or any other corporations that may later be formed, which do not comprise

a portion of the actual stated salary of HENRY HUTCHERSON, III, as reflected in the company

books shall be separate property.” Although property bought with community funds was to be

designated community property regardless of whose name was on the title, any property purchased

using a party’s separate property wholly or as a down payment would be that party’s separate

property “regardless of the terms of the financing agreement, and even if the community credit

is pledge.”

The PMA provided that in the event of divorce, each party would receive “all

separate property belonging to that party” as well as “one-half of all community assets, less

community debt.” The agreement made no provision regarding spousal maintenance. Hank and

Tina waived reimbursement claims other than those for benefits from the community to their

separate estates:

Any payment or contributions by one of us to satisfy the debts or otherwise benefit the separate estate of the other shall not give rise to a claim for reimbursement of an interest in any property purchased by those payments unless we otherwise agree in writing. Any right of reimbursement that may arise during our marriage for payments or contributions made to the other’s separate estate by the community estate shall be reimbursed.

Tina testified at trial regarding her marriage to Hank, the couple’s lifestyle, and his

adultery. They married on December 13, 1993. Tina had been a flight attendant for around six

years when she met Hank but stopped working at his insistence in 1992 or 1993, when their first

child was born. She testified that Hank “did not want [her] to work” but rather “wanted [her] to

stay home with the children and family” and “to always be available, kind of at his beck and call

because he wasn’t really a planner.” Although she and Hank discussed her returning to work once

their children were in school and again in 2013, after he cheated on her, he discouraged the idea 3 and questioned the value of any financial contribution she could make, reportedly telling her,

“[W]hat’s that going to do for us, we fly around in private jets and first class and you want to go

back to slinging drinks in the back.”

According to Tina, when she and Hank married, they initially lived in an apartment

with his sister, and Accurate was “just a small paint shop.” The business flourished over the course

of the marriage, and the couple moved into a series of large ranches purchased by Accurate in

Hutto, Wimberley, and Thorndale. Hank told Tina that one of the ranches belonged to both of

them and referred to another ranch as “ours.” Tina and two of her children played polocrosse, an

equestrian sport for which they and their horses traveled “all over the United States” and for which

the two children also traveled “internationally extensively.” The family frequently vacationed in

Hawaii and Telluride, Colorado—often accompanied by the children’s friends—and during the

marriage, Tina had access to helicopters and private jets, which Hank also referred to as “ours.”

Tina never turned down a trip or a flight on a private jet or helicopter; she enjoyed that part of their

lifestyle. In addition to the travel, Hank bought himself a new car “every thirty or fifty-thousand

miles” and bought her a new Suburban every few years; he did not tell her that the vehicles

were purchased in Accurate’s name. Although she was not “one hundred percent” certain as

to Accurate’s worth, she testified that “[a]t some point, I think we saw numbers like in the

37 million range.”

Tina “never questioned the finances” and did not ask if the family could afford to

travel as it did; she assumed “if we were doing it then we could afford it.” Asked if she and Hank

discussed their “future together and what that looked like as far as property,” she testified, “No,

not—no, I mean, I guess it was all—we didn’t have great communication as far as any of that. It

was whatever he decided, that’s what we did.” He managed the couple’s finances, and she “didn’t

4 have any say so or control or knowledge of anything.” She did not have access to their tax returns

or bank statements and never attempted to gain access to the latter because Hank “pretty much told

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Henry Hutcherson III v. Tina Hutcherson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henry-hutcherson-iii-v-tina-hutcherson-txctapp3-2026.