in the Matter of the Marriage of Sara Alyssa Cruey and Joshua Wayne Cruey

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2022
Docket09-21-00125-CV
StatusPublished

This text of in the Matter of the Marriage of Sara Alyssa Cruey and Joshua Wayne Cruey (in the Matter of the Marriage of Sara Alyssa Cruey and Joshua Wayne Cruey) 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.

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in the Matter of the Marriage of Sara Alyssa Cruey and Joshua Wayne Cruey, (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-21-00125-CV __________________

IN THE MATTER OF THE MARRIAGE OF SARA ALYSSA CRUEY AND JOSHUA WAYNE CRUEY

__________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 247th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Cause No. 2019-53047 __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This is an appeal from a final decree of divorce.1 In four appellate issues,

Joshua Cruey (“Joshua” or “Appellant”) contends the trial court abused its discretion

in granting Sara Cruey (“Sara” or “Appellee”) a late amendment to her pleadings, in

characterizing his entire pension as community property, in making a

disproportionate division and forced sale of the marital residence, and in making its

division of property. We affirm.

1 This case was transferred to our Court from the Fourteenth Court of Appeals in Houston, Texas under an order issued by the Supreme Court of Texas. See Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 73.001. 1 Background

Sara and Joshua were married in April 2015, and they separated in August

2019. 2 Sara filed an Original Petition for Divorce and she later filed several amended

petitions. In her Third Amended Petition—filed on September 10, 2020—Sara

requested that the marital home at 18210 South Austin Shores Drive (“the Austin

Shores home”) be sold and the proceeds be divided in a just and right manner. She

also asserted a Reimbursement Claim, asking the court to reimburse her “separate

estate for funds paid on behalf of [Joshua’s] separate estate including but not limited

to the payoff of [Joshua’s] vehicle.”

On September 11, 2020, Joshua filed a counterpetition, asserting claims for

reimbursement. Joshua requested the court (1) to reimburse the community estate

for funds or assets it expended for the benefit of Sara’s separate estate, (2) to

reimburse Joshua’s separate estate for funds or assets it expended for the benefit of

Sara’s separate estate, (3) to reimburse the community estate for funds or assets it

expended to make capital improvements on property Sara claimed as her separate

property, (4) to reimburse Joshua’s separate estate for funds or assets it expended to

make capital improvements on property Sara claimed as separate property, (5) to

2 Sara and Joshua had one child together. Issues relating to the child were resolved at mediation before trial and were merged into the Final Decree of Divorce. The issues at trial and on appeal do not relate to child custody issues but only to the division of property, Sara’s amended petitions, and Joshua’s motion for new trial. 2 reimburse the community estate for funds or assets it expended for the payment of a

debt owed by Sara that was secured by property Sara claimed as separate property,

and (6) to reimburse Joshua’s separate estate for funds or assets it expended for the

payment of a debt owed by Sara that was secured by property Sara claimed as

separate property.3

A bench trial on the division of property was held March 18, 2021. After the

trial but before the trial court made its ruling, Sara filed a motion for leave to file her

Fourth Amended Petition, along with her Fourth Amended Petition, in which she

asserted a Reimbursement Claim, alleging that the property located at 18326 Water

Mill Drive (“the Water Mill home”) was her separate property, that the $52,091.43

received from the sale of the Water Mill home was her separate property, and that

$52,091.43 was paid towards the down payment of the Austin Shores marital home.

Sara alleged that the community estate benefited by her separate estate funds and

she should be reimbursed $52,091.43 by the community estate. Sara also asked the

court to grant an equitable lien in the amount of $52,091.43 in her favor and against

the community estate based on her claim for reimbursement.

3 The counterpetition did not identify specific properties, assets, or debts. 3 Evidence at Trial

Sara’s Testimony

Sara testified that she bought her home on Water Mill in 2012, that she lived

at Water Mill before she married Joshua, and that she and Joshua lived at the Water

Mill home for a while after they married until they bought the Austin Shores home

together. She recalled that she sold the Water Mill home on November 9, 2017, the

same day she and Joshua bought the Austin Shores home. According to Sara, all the

proceeds from the sale of the Water Mill home were used as a down payment on the

Austin Shores home. Exhibit 5 was admitted into evidence, which Sara identified as

the closing documents for both homes. Sara testified that $52,091.43 in cash

proceeds from the sale of the Water Mill home were transferred as a credit for the

purchase of the Austin Shores home, and the Austin Shores home cost $353,000.

The closing papers for the sale of the Water Mill home listed the seller as “Sara A.

Cruey f/k/a Sara A. Richardson[.]” Sara agreed that she was asking the court for a

reimbursement for $52,091.43.

Sara understood that the Harris County Appraisal District valued the Austin

Shores home at about $383,899, and she believed the remaining balance on the

mortgage was about $305,000. Sara agreed she was asking for the Austin Shores

home to be sold because “that’s the only way [she] would get [her] separate property

back.”

4 Sara also testified that she was asking for Joshua’s Houston Fire Department

(“HFD”) retirement to be fairly divided. Sara’s Amended Suggested Division of

Property reflected that she believed the HFD retirement was valued at about

$45,201.51 and she suggested she and Joshua each receive $22,600.76. Petitioner’s

Exhibit 19 was admitted into evidence, which was Joshua’s First Supplemental

Answers and Objections to Petitioner’s First Set of Written Interrogatories. The

interrogatory responses reflect that Joshua valued his separate property portion of

his HFD retirement fund at $14,961.00.

At the close of Sara’s case in chief, Joshua requested a directed verdict on

Sara’s claim for reimbursement and request for an equitable lien because there was

no clear and convincing evidence that the Water Mill home was Sara’s separate

property, there was improper tracing of funds, and Sara had not pleaded for an

equitable lien. The court denied the motion.

On cross-examination, Sara testified that Zillow had made an offer to buy the

Austin Shores house in November 2019, and Sara believed that, based on the terms

of that offer, she and Joshua would have taken a loss on the sale of the house. Sara

also agreed that Joshua was working for the HFD when they got married and that

portions of his retirement account were accumulated before the marriage. She also

testified that she would not oppose the court only dividing the portion of the HFD

account accumulated during the marriage. Sara also testified that Joshua started

5 living at the Water Mill home in February 2014, he paid towards the mortgage and

some of the home expenses while he lived there, and the mortgage balance reduced

because they both had been paying on it for years. Sara testified that she had been

unable to obtain a statement of the mortgage balance as of the date of the marriage.

Sara agreed that upon closing on the sale of the Water Mill home, she did not receive

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