in the Interest of K.R.C. and L.R.C.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 1, 2015
Docket05-13-01419-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Interest of K.R.C. and L.R.C. (in the Interest of K.R.C. and L.R.C.) 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 K.R.C. and L.R.C., (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion Filed December 1, 2015

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-13-01419-CV

IN THE INTEREST OF: K.R.C. AND L.R.C.

On Appeal from the 429th Judicial District Court Collin County, Texas Trial Court Cause No.429-51917-2010

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Bridges, Lang-Miers, and Myers Opinion by Justice Bridges Austin Croom appeals the trial court’s final divorce decree awarding Casey Croom

$397,000 and permanently enjoining the parties from having their daughters, K.R.C. and L.R.C.,

in the presence of Christina Hopper or Hopper’s two sons. In two issues, Austin argues the trial

court abused its discretion by ordering an equalization payment in the form of a money judgment

for $397,000 because there was no evidence to support reconstituting the estate based on fraud

on the community and by entering a permanent injunction that was not in the best interest of

K.R.C. and L.R.C.. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Austin and Casey were married in 1999. Together, they owned ninety-eight percent of

Aecium, a medical billing services limited partnership. The remaining two percent of Aecium

was owned by ACM Management, which was owned one hundred percent by Austin and Casey.

Hopper, an Aecium employee, worked with accounts payable, accounts receivable, payroll,

human resources support, and software implementation. In late 2007 or early 2008, Austin and Hopper began a sexual relationship. Austin increased Hopper’s pay from $50,600 in 2008, to

$91,136 in 2009, to $97,575 in 2010, and to $92,400 in 2011.

In April 2010, Austin and Casey separated, and Casey filed for divorce. The divorce

petition asserted Casey should be awarded a disproportionate share of the community estate

because of Austin’s fault in the breakup of the marriage and Austin’s fraud on the community

and wasting of community assets. Since October 1, 2009, a standing order had been in place in

Collin County ordering the parties in a divorce case to refrain from, among other things,

incurring any indebtedness other than legal expense in connection with the divorce, unless

specifically authorized by the standing order. Nevertheless, in September 2011, Austin co-

signed a contract with Hopper for the remodeling of her home, and the contract exposed Austin

to liability for “just over $13,000.” Hopper paid the contract using money from her mother, her

own cash, and a $3000 loan from Aecium.

The matter proceeded to a trial before the court in January 2012. Bryan Rice, a business

appraiser, testified he performed a valuation of Aecium and determined its fair market value was

$302,000 as of March 31, 2012. Rice testified he made a capital valuation adjustment for

salaries and wages and adjusted Hopper’s salary to the United States Board of Labor and

Statistics 75th percentile for bookkeeping, accounting, auditing, and clerks. Not including the

year 2012, Price determined Hopper had been overcompensated by approximately $150,000.

Stephen Fuqua, a certified public accountant, testified he analyzed Rice’s valuation.

Fuqua testified he agreed with Rice’s “adjustment with regard to excessive salaries being paid”

to Hopper. Fuqua testified he agreed Hopper was overpaid “about $150,000” or approximately

$50,000 per year in 2009, 2010, and 2011. Fuqua testified he understood Hopper was still

employed in 2012, but Rice’s valuation did not include 2012. Denise Kauf, a certified valuation

–2– analyst who worked with Fuqua, testified she adopted Fuqua’s report as her analysis of Rice’s

valuation of Aecium.

Casey testified Austin’s adultery precipitated their divorce. Casey asked the trial court to

affirmatively find that Austin had wasted community assets and reconstitute the community

estate as it related to overpayments to Hopper, money spent on repairs to Hopper’s home, and

money spent to repair Austin’s jet ski. Casey also asked the trial court to enter orders enjoining

Hopper’s two teenage sons from being in the presence of K.R.C. and L.R.C.

Hopper testified she was not aware “the parties had an agreement that the children were

not to be around any person with whom a parent was in an intimate or dating relationship.”

Hopper testified she was also not aware of “such an injunction entered by the Court on January

4th, 2012.” Hopper testified Austin’s children had been in her presence twice and “possibly” in

the presence of Hopper’s two sons.

Before closing arguments, with counsel for both Casey and Austin present, the trial court

made the following statement:

All right. I will note for the record that both counsel met with me and then Dr. Grace Graham and -- what is her name, Taylor -- Jennifer Taylor. Both who are counselors for [K.R.C. and L.R.C.]. We all met in chambers this morning for at least half an hour or more to discuss concerns that I had regarding the girls, so I don’t believe we are going to have -- I don’t need any testimony about that this morning. Have you had a chance to talk to your clients? Now that it’s been about two hours, have you had a chance to talk to your clients about what happened in chambers?

Counsel for Austin replied, “Yes, we have.” The trial court then held an off-the-record

discussion. Back on the record, the trial court asked the parties to proceed with closing

arguments. At the conclusion of trial, the trial court took the matter under advisement.

In March 2013, the trial court issued a “Judge’s Memorandum” granting divorce on the

grounds of adultery. The trial court found Austin was “at fault in [the] breakup of the marriage

and guilty of adultery,” Austin had wasted community assets and engaged in fraud on the –3– community estate, and the community estate should be reconstituted. The memorandum

enjoined, among other things, “the children being in the presence of or having contact with

Christy Hopper or her children.” The memorandum divided the assets according to a

spreadsheet reflecting three amounts of “Reconstitution of Community”: $195,000, $3500, and

$1500. In total, the memorandum ordered a $347,000 equalization payment to Casey.

In May 2013, Casey filed her second motion to enter final decree of divorce with a

proposed decree awarding her the $347,000 equalization payment plus $50,000 from an Aecium

401k. Both Casey’s proposed decree and a proposed decree submitted by Austin indicated

Austin paid the $50,000 to a law firm, and the $50,000 would have to be disgorged in order to

pay it to Casey. The trial court did not sign either proposed decree. In August 2013, the trial

court entered a final decree of divorce awarding Casey a $397,000 judgment to equalize the

property division. The final decree also enjoined Casey and Austin from having K.R.C. and

L.R.C. in the presence of or having any contact with Hopper or her children. This appeal

followed.

In his first issue, Austin argues the trial court abused its discretion in ordering an

equalization payment in the form of a money judgment for $397,000 in favor of Casey because

there was no evidence to support reconstituting the estate based on waste or fraud on the

community. Specifically, Austin argues there is no evidence to show Hopper was overpaid;

partnership funds are not community property, and any reconstitution that included $195,000 for

compensation paid by Aecium to Hopper was error because the funds used were not community

property; the expert testimony that Hopper was overpaid was “purely conclusory” and therefore

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