in the Interest of H.D v. Jr. and B v. Children

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 26, 2016
Docket05-15-00421-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of H.D v. Jr. and B v. Children (in the Interest of H.D v. Jr. and B v. Children) 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
in the Interest of H.D v. Jr. and B v. Children, (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

AFFIRM; and Opinion Filed August 26, 2016.

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-15-00421-CV

IN THE INTEREST OF H.D.V., JR. AND B.V., CHILDREN

On Appeal from the 303rd Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 10-04711

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Lang-Miers, Evans, and Brown Opinion by Justice Brown Following a bench trial, Husband appeals a final decree of divorce. In seven issues, he

contends the trial court erred in awarding Wife money and property under a premarital

agreement, ordering him to pay attorney’s fees to Wife’s attorneys, awarding child support

beyond the statutory child support guidelines, and failing to issue required findings of fact and

conclusions of law. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND

Several months before their October 2003 marriage, Husband and Wife entered into a

premarital agreement and Husband obtained a judgment declaring the agreement to be valid and

enforceable. Among other things, the premarital agreement provided that no community

property estate would be created. During the marriage, Husband and Wife had two children. In

March 2010, Wife filed for divorce. Husband filed a counter petition for divorce. The trial court entered temporary orders that required Husband to pay Wife’s interim

attorney’s fees. Beginning in October 2010, the court ordered Husband to pay to Wife’s attorney

an amount equal to the lesser of Wife’s actual fees each month or the amount Husband spent for

attorney’s fees in that same month. In May 2012, the court ordered Husband to immediately pay

interim attorney’s fees to Pezzulli Barnes, LLP, who had represented Wife, in the amount of

$618,373.57. The court later corrected the fee calculation and ordered Husband to pay an

additional $57,403.56 in interim fees, for a total of $675,777.13. After they no longer

represented Wife, Pezzulli Barnes and another law firm that represented Wife, Nace & Motley,

L.L.P., intervened to recover their attorney’s fees.

The court held a bench trial in February 2014. Just prior to trial, the parties agreed to a

parenting plan, so the trial centered on financial issues. The court signed its final decree of

divorce on December 8, 2014. The trial court incorporated the terms of the parenting plan into

the decree. It also affirmed the validity of the premarital agreement and found the parties did not

have any community property. The court awarded each party all property in his or her

possession. It specifically awarded Wife a 2002 Mercedes-Benz as her separate property and

divested Husband of all right to that property. Under the terms of the premarital agreement, the

court ordered Husband to pay Wife $30,000 as an allowance and also $3 million.

Regarding Wife’s attorney’s fees, the divorce decree recited that Husband had paid

intervenor Pezzulli Barnes $89,537.50 in court-ordered interim attorney’s fees and still owed the

firm $675,777.13. The decree awarded Pezzulli Barnes a judgment against Husband for

$675,777.13. The court also awarded Pezzulli Barnes a judgment against Wife for $675,777.13

and specified that the firm was entitled to one recovery only. The court also awarded Nace &

Motley a judgment against Husband for $35,589.09. Only Husband, not Wife, was ordered to

–2– pay those fees. Wife was solely responsible for the fees she owed two other law firms. This

appeal followed.

PROPERTY DIVISION

In his first three issues, Husband contends the trial court erred in awarding Wife money

and property under the premarital agreement. He specifically contends the court erred in

awarding Wife (1) $3 million, (2) an allowance of $10,000 a month for the months of January,

February, and March of 2010, and (2) the Mercedes-Benz. We disagree.

Award of $3 Million

We first consider Husband’s complaints about the award of $3 million under the

premarital agreement. Section 12.01 is the relevant portion of the agreement. It provided,

“When our marriage is dissolved by death, divorce, or otherwise, each party shall receive” all

separate property belonging to that party, one-half of the parties’ jointly held property, and all

property that would be the party’s separate property if they had not married. Section 12.01

further provided for Husband to make a cash payment to Wife, the amount of which varied

depending on the length of the marriage and the value of the parties’ separate estates. In

subsections 12.01 (a) through (e), the agreement set out five possible ways to determine that

sum. Because the parties were married more than five years, the relevant provisions were:

Additionally, in the event of the parties’ divorce . . . (b) if the parties have been married for more than five years upon the date of the filing for dissolution of the marriage and if [Wife’s] separate property estate has a value of less than TEN MILLION AND NO/100THS ($10,000,000.00) DOLLARS and if [Husband’s] separate property liquid net worth has a value of TEN MILLION AND NO/100THS ($10,000,000.00) DOLLARS or more, [Wife] shall receive from [Husband] an aggregate amount equal to the value of 1/2 of the difference between the value of [Husband’s] separate property liquid net worth and the value of [Wife’s] separate property estate or THREE MILLION AND NO/100THS ($3,000,000.00) DOLLARS, whichever is less; or . . . (d) if the parties have been married for more than five (5) years upon the date of the filing for dissolution of the marriage and the value of [Wife’s] separate property estate is less than TEN MILLION AND NO/100THS ($10,000,000.00) DOLLARS and if [Husband’s] separate property liquid net worth has a value of less than TEN MILLION AND –3– NO/100THS ($10,000,000.00) DOLLARS, [Wife] shall receive thirty percent (30%) of [Husband’s] separate property liquid net worth or THREE MILLION AND NO/100THS ($3,000,000.00) DOLLARS, whichever is less . . . .

In the divorce decree, the court recited that the measurement date for determining the

amount owed was the date of the filing of the divorce petition. The court further found that

Wife’s separate estate was worth less than $10 million and Husband’s separate liquid net worth

was more than $10 million. The court found that subsection (b) was the applicable subsection

and ordered that Husband must pay Wife $3 million.

Husband contends that under section 12.01, the date on which his liquid net worth should

have been measured is the date of the divorce, which occurred in 2014. Wife, on the other hand,

maintains the trial court correctly determined that the date for determining liquid net worth was

the date Wife filed for divorce, March 15, 2010.

Courts interpret premarital agreements like other written contracts. Williams v. Williams,

246 S.W.3d 207, 210 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2007, no pet.). In interpreting a written

contract, the primary concern of the court is to ascertain the true intentions of the parties, as

expressed in the instrument. Id. We examine the entire writing to harmonize and give effect to

all the provisions of the contract, so that none will be rendered meaningless. Id. All language

should be given its plain grammatical meaning unless doing so would defeat the parties’ intent.

Id.

Husband contends the pertinent date is the date of divorce because the opening language

of section 12.01 was, “When our marriage is dissolved by death, divorce, or otherwise.” He also

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