Jerrel Dean Hancock v. Peggy Lynn Hancock

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 3, 2015
Docket01-14-00089-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jerrel Dean Hancock v. Peggy Lynn Hancock (Jerrel Dean Hancock v. Peggy Lynn Hancock) 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
Jerrel Dean Hancock v. Peggy Lynn Hancock, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Opinion issued February 3, 2015

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-14-00089-CV ——————————— JERREL DEAN HANCOCK, Appellant V. PEGGY LYNN HANCOCK, Appellee

On Appeal from the County Court at Law No. Two Galveston County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 12FD3236

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Jerrel Dean (“J.D.”) and Peggy Lynn Hancock each sought a divorce from

the other. The trial court granted the divorce decree and awarded Peggy spousal

maintenance in the amount of $3,300 per month for three years. J.D. brings this

appeal to challenge the award of spousal maintenance, arguing that there was no evidence that Peggy lacked the ability to support herself or to rebut the

presumption that spousal maintenance is not warranted.

We find the evidence to be sufficient to support the judgment, and

accordingly we affirm.

Background

Peggy and J.D. were married in 1974, when she was 19 years old and he was

20. Together they had two children, who were adults at the time of trial.

Both Peggy and J.D. worked throughout most of their marriage. Peggy

worked as a licensed vocational nurse providing patient care until the early 1990s.

Later she worked as a nurse consultant and in specialized medical billing roles.

Peggy testified that she stopped working in 2009 at J.D.’s request and became a

“professional grandmother.”

J.D. worked in the oil and gas industry, and in March 2009 he accepted early

retirement incentives offered by his former employer. At that time he was 55 years

old and a supervisor for turnarounds. After “retiring,” however, J.D. continued to

work as a contractor in the oil and gas industry. Although his work was part-time,

he earned more than $200,000 per year in 2010, 2011, and 2012.

From April through September 2012, J.D. worked in Wyoming, where he

began a relationship with another woman. When he returned to Texas in September

to attend his son’s wedding, he asked Peggy for a divorce and confessed his

2 extramarital affair. Although Peggy contemplated reconciliation, J.D. was not

interested in reconciling, and he soon began living with his paramour.

Peggy filed a petition for divorce, in which she sought spousal maintenance.

J.D. responded with a counterpetition. Both spouses alleged insupportability and

adultery.

At trial, Peggy testified about the ways in which she suffered emotionally

from the separation and divorce. She sought help from a professional counselor,

who testified at trial that Peggy was initially “very distraught, very upset” when

J.D. asked for a divorce, and she was overwhelmed and unable “to do a lot of

things.”

Peggy’s emotional state and other concerns impeded her ability to seek

employment. She testified about a litany of health problems that caused her to

suffer chronic pain and made working difficult. She had been overweight most of

her adult life and had undergone three surgeries related to gastric banding and

related complications. In January 2013, she had breast-reduction surgery to address

chronic back and neck pain and a body lift due to weight loss. In June and July

2013, she underwent carpal-tunnel surgery in both hands, but she continued to

experience pain from bone spurs in her thumbs. In addition, surgery to repair a torn

meniscus in her left knee was scheduled to occur approximately one month after

trial.

3 Although Peggy testified to significant pain reduction as a result of both the

breast-reduction and carpal-tunnel surgeries, she still found it necessary to wear

splints on both wrists to reduce pain. It was also difficult for her to lift things, such

that lifting a patient’s chart would be challenging. When asked about jobs that did

not involve direct patient care, Peggy said that she could not return to medical

billing or consulting because the jobs in that field had largely become obsolete.

Moreover, writing or typing for more than short periods of time was painful.

In addition to her current health problems, Peggy testified about her medical

history, which included a total replacement of her right knee, colon cancer, asthma,

arthritis in her hands and knees, basal-cell skin cancer, irritable bowel syndrome,

and urinary incontinence. She said that working a 12-hour shift at a nursing home

would be “very, very hard” on her right knee.

While the divorce was pending, Peggy applied for jobs at numerous

hospitals in the Houston area. Several informed her that they hired only registered

nurses (RNs), not licensed vocational nurses (LVNs). She testified that most LVN

jobs are now in nursing homes, where the LVNs are expected to turn people, assist

with bathing, and perform other hands-on tasks that involve lifting people. She

testified that she sought employment at several nursing homes, but she did so soon

after her carpal-tunnel surgeries. She was not a successful candidate, however,

because her recovery would take six months.

4 Though Peggy last worked with patients 13 years earlier, she testified that

she knew she would have to work again and that the breast-reduction surgery was

an attempt to alleviate her daily back and neck pain so she could work. This

surgery made a significant difference, and Peggy believed that “down the road” it

would “help immensely” in her ability to work. Similarly, though she had testified

that her carpal-tunnel syndrome was painful and worsened with activity, she also

reported that the pain was “virtually gone” after the surgeries.

The Hancocks maintained joint checking and savings accounts throughout

most of their marriage, but J.D. stopped making deposits into the accounts in

February 2013. Peggy obtained an agreed order for temporary spousal support in

the amount of $3,665 per month beginning in April 2013.

Peggy sought spousal maintenance in the divorce. She estimated her total

monthly expenses at $5,000, including the cost of health insurance, a benefit that

she would lose as a result of the divorce. She anticipated that she could earn

between $17 and $21 per hour as an LVN in a nursing home. Nevertheless, without

regard to her health problems and the gap in her work history, she anticipated that

she could not earn enough money to cover her minimum reasonable expenses.

Moreover, she had no retirement savings apart from J.D.’s 401(k) retirement

account, and she was not eligible for Social Security.

5 In light of her age, health, experience, work history, and the obsolescence of

jobs in her field, Peggy testified that she did not have the ability to provide for her

minimum needs. She testified that without an award of spousal maintenance she

would have to use retirement funds to pay for her expenses, and because of her

age, she would incur penalties and taxes on those withdrawals. At the close of her

testimony and in response to a question from the court, Peggy testified that it

would take her at least two years to become an RN because none of her LVN

training or experience would be transferable to an RN training program. She said:

“I would literally have to start all over again as a layperson . . . and go . . . for an

associate’s.” In his closing statement, Peggy’s trial attorney specifically disclaimed

any reliance on the statutory provision allowing an award of spousal maintenance

because of a disability, see TEX. FAM. CODE § 8.051(2)(A), and said, “We’re going

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Jerrel Dean Hancock v. Peggy Lynn Hancock, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jerrel-dean-hancock-v-peggy-lynn-hancock-texapp-2015.