in the Matter of the Marriage of Rasha Al Hashimi and Haider Alwash

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 30, 2018
Docket14-17-00488-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Matter of the Marriage of Rasha Al Hashimi and Haider Alwash (in the Matter of the Marriage of Rasha Al Hashimi and Haider Alwash) 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 Matter of the Marriage of Rasha Al Hashimi and Haider Alwash, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed August 30, 2018.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-17-00488-CV

IN THE MATTER OF THE MARRIAGE OF RASHA AL HASHIMI AND HAIDER ALWASH

On Appeal from the 306th District Court Galveston County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 15-FD-2744

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Rasha Al Hashimi (“Rasha”) appeals from a final divorce decree. In her first issue, Rasha contends the trial court erred by awarding her former father-in-law, intervenor Salam Alwash (“Salam”), certain property she contends belongs to the community estate. In her second issue, Rasha asserts that she proved by clear and convincing evidence that her husband, Haider Alwash (“Haider”), committed adultery, and the trial court erred by failing to grant the divorce on adultery grounds. The trial court granted the divorce on insupportability grounds, and Rasha does not challenge that finding. After review of the record, we conclude that Rasha failed to challenge all independent grounds supporting the trial court’s judgment awarding the disputed property to Salam. Thus, we overrule her first issue. Further, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in granting the divorce on insupportability grounds, rather than adultery, under the circumstances of this case. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Background

Haider and Rasha married legally in October 2011 and through a religious ceremony in August 2013. They separated in late September 2015, and Rasha filed for divorce on insupportability and adultery grounds in October 2015. Rasha also alleged that Haider fraudulently transferred community assets ($603,000 cash) to Haider’s brother and sister-in-law, Hashim Salam Alwash (“Hashim”) and Israa Basil Ali (“Ali”). Rasha requested that the trial court restore this cash to the community estate. In September 2016, the trial court signed an agreed order requiring that (1) $595,000 from Hashim’s and Ali’s bank account be transferred to a separate, interest-bearing account (the “Transfer Account”) and (2) the “bank . . . only disburse any funds from the account pursuant to a court order.”

Salam filed a petition in intervention in the divorce proceedings, claiming that two homes, the funds in the Transfer Account, and a vehicle (the “Honda CRV”)— all of which Rasha claimed as community assets—belonged to him.1 Salam sought a declaration that he owned these assets, and he requested the court to impose a constructive trust and award the contested assets to him.

1 Haider also claimed that these assets were Salam’s property that Haider held in trust for Salam.

2 The trial court conducted a two-day bench trial. Rasha testified that Haider sent love notes and text messages, and placed phone calls, to another woman with whom Haider claimed to be in love. Rasha believed that Haider committed adultery because he said he loved the other woman and had kissed her. Rasha introduced photos of messages exchanged between Haider and the other woman, including messages in which the two declared their love for each other. Rasha presented no proof that Haider had extramarital sexual relations with the other woman. Rasha testified that Haider refused to give her a religious divorce, which was important to her because she could not remarry in her faith unless she obtained a religious divorce.2 Absent an agreement from Haider, Rasha, as a woman, could secure a religious divorce only upon proving certain grounds, such as adultery.

Rasha testified that the marital estate included the following disputed property at issue: (1) a house in Canada (the “Canadian House”); (2) a house in League City, Texas (the “League City House”); (3) the funds in the Transfer Account; and (4) the Honda CRV. According to Rasha, the Canadian House was purchased using money given to the couple by their parents. Rasha testified that she and Haider had title to the Canadian House because only their names appeared on the deed as owners. Rasha claimed that money from the couple’s joint account was used to purchase the League City House and the Honda CRV, both of which were titled only in Haider’s name. She stated that Haider received income from his “family business” that was deposited into the couple’s joint account through wire transfers from Istanbul. Rasha did not know what Haider did to earn these funds.

Haider testified that he never committed adultery with the other woman. He also denied engaging in a physical relationship with her. Haider stated that he would

2 The record reflects that both Rasha and Haider are practicing Muslims.

3 agree to grant Rasha a religious divorce. He explained that he did not need grounds for a religious divorce.

Haider testified that once he was granted United States residency, he helped his parents apply to come to the United States from Iraq. According to Haider, after his parents obtained approval to immigrate to the United States, they began transferring money to the account that he and Rasha jointly held. Haider pointed to evidence showing various transfers of nearly $1 million through Istanbul, Turkey. According to Haider, these funds came from his father’s accounts in Iraq and were to be held or invested for his father. These funds were not gifts to Haider and Rasha. Haider stated he told Rasha, “I am keeping money in trust for my dad because he’s moving here.”

According to Haider, Salam owns the Canadian House and the League City House. Haider stated that Salam provided the full purchase money for both houses, and that Haider held the houses “in trust” for Salam. Regarding the Canadian House, Haider described the “trust agreement” as “this house will be bought by my dad, and the house will be registered in my name until he moved to the United States.” Haider explained that Salam wired the purchase money to Rasha’s father, Haider Al Hashimi (“Rasha’s Father”), who used it to purchase the house with Haider’s and Rasha’s names on the deed as buyers. Haider testified that Rasha knew the Canadian House was purchased as an investment for Salam using Salam’s money. Regarding the League City House, Haider testified that he purchased that house with his father’s money. Again, Haider stated he and Rasha were holding the house “in trust” for Salam.

According to Haider, he also used part of his father’s money to buy the Honda CRV for his father, although he and Rasha were permitted to use it until his father arrived from Iraq. Haider acknowledged that after he and Rasha separated, he moved

4 a significant sum of money from their joint account to a separate account in his name only, then transferred this money to his brother and sister-in-law.

Rasha’s Father testified that he contributed over $100,000 of his personal funds to the purchase of the Canadian House; the rest of the money came from Salam. When shown documents demonstrating that Salam wired the entire amount for the home purchase to Rasha’s Father, he explained that a portion of the funds Salam wired to him was to pay off computers Salam bought from Rasha’s Father’s company.

Finally, Salam testified. Salam stated that once he learned that he would be able to move to the United States, he began transferring money to both his sons— Haider and Hashim. According to Salam, he transferred his “life savings” to his sons. Salam stated that he wanted to purchase a home in Canada as an investment and to help Haider and Rasha by letting them either live there or use the rental income to help them with expenses. Salam stated that he provided all the purchase money for the Canadian House and that Rasha’s Father did not provide “one cent” for its purchase.

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