Joyce Regina McCray v. Carlton Dale McCray

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 21, 2017
Docket05-15-01557-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Joyce Regina McCray v. Carlton Dale McCray (Joyce Regina McCray v. Carlton Dale McCray) 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
Joyce Regina McCray v. Carlton Dale McCray, (Tex. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion Filed July 21, 2017

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-15-01557-CV

JOYCE REGINA MCCRAY, Appellant V. CARLTON DALE MCCRAY, Appellee

On Appeal from the 397th Judicial District Court Grayson County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. FA-13-2009

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Bridges, Evans, and Schenck Opinion by Justice Bridges Joyce Regina McCray appeals the trial court’s final decree of divorce. In four issues in

her pro se brief, Joyce argues the issue of her entitlement to post driver attachments was

“unilaterally determined” by Carlton McCray’s counsel and was never brought before the trial

court; Carlton is liable for property taxes on the Petty Farm; Carlton has failed to pay amounts

owed on 2012 taxes; and Carlton should be required to pay taxes on Joyce’s income and oil

money that was used for community expenses for the 2013 tax year. We affirm the trial court’s

judgment.

Carlton and Joyce were married in November 2006. In November 2013, Carlton filed

his first amended petition for divorce. In August 2014, Carlton and Joyce entered into a

mediated settlement agreement that provided, in part, that Joyce would purchase the couple’s “Petty Farm for $100,000, net, ‘As is.’ Terms will be $25,000 down, and payments of $25,000

per year until paid. Note will be secured by both Petty Farms, will be pre-payable without

penalty, and have a due-on-sale clause. Closing when [Carlton] vacates the Petty Farm.” The

agreement provided Carlton could continue to occupy the Petty Farm until December 31, 2014,

and also awarded Carlton “the contents of the mobile home on the Petty Property and all cattle.”

At the bottom of the agreement were 2 handwritten items initialed by the parties: “Joyce’s family

Auger to Joyce” and “Rhorer post driver & attachments to Joyce.”

In November 2014, Carlton filed a motion for enforcement of the agreement seeking the

return of “between $10,000 and $15,000”in personal property Joyce allegedly removed from the

Petty Farm in violation of the agreement. In response, Joyce filed a general denial. In January

2015, Joyce filed a counterpetition for enforcement of the agreement complaining that Carlton

continued to occupy and keep items on the Petty Farm past the December 31, 2014 deadline,

failed to move the fence placed on a neighbor’s land, took coins awarded to Joyce from a safe on

the property, and took tools and other property from a house and building on the property. Joyce

sought return of the property and an order requiring Carlton to immediately vacate the Petty

Farm.

In March 2015, the trial court conducted a hearing on the motions for enforcement and, at

the outset, limited the parties to “20 minutes a side.” Carlton’s attorney first reviewed the terms

of the mediated settlement agreement awarding Joyce certain property and asked Carlton if he

understood what property belonged to Joyce at the Petty Farm. Carlton agreed that the property

listed in the agreement belonged to Joyce. Carlton testified he had seen the “laundry list” of

tools and other property attached to Joyce’s counterpetition, but those items of property were not

in the building or house on the Petty Farm at the time of the agreement. Carlton testified he was

not yet “out of the property” at the time of trial because it had been “raining and been nasty.”

–2– After entering into the agreement, Carlton discovered Joyce had gone to the Petty Farm and

removed the property listed in his motion for enforcement. Carlton testified all of the property

Joyce took belonged to him. On cross-examination, Carlton testified he did not remove from the

Petty Farm any of the property listed in Joyce’s counterpetition. Carlton testified he was aware

that he had not paid taxes for 2012, knew he owed a $537 deficiency, and would pay the

deficiency “if [he] owe[d] it.” Rogers Phillips testified he had done work for Carlton and Joyce,

he helped Carlton move a bathtub into the house on the Petty Farm, and he did not see in the

house any of the tools or property Joyce listed in her counterpetition.

Joyce testified she took “nothing that was not awarded” to her in the agreement from the

Petty Farm. Joyce testified Carlton admitted “breaking in the house and taking what he wanted,

and my shed too.” Joyce went to Lowe’s and attempted to identify the missing tools and

calculated a value of six thousand dollars. On cross-examination, Joyce testified she did not take

the items listed in Carlton’s motion for enforcement from the Petty Farm. At the conclusion of

the hearing, the trial court granted the divorce, gave Carlton until March 15 to vacate the farm,

and ordered that Joyce tender $25,000 as a down payment on the farm.

In May 2015, the trial court conducted a hearing on the parties’ disputes concerning

Carlton’s failure to vacate the Petty Farm by March 15, 2015; ownership of the mobile home at

the farm and whether Carlton was required to remove it; and provisions in the closing documents

for the sale of the farm. Joyce’s attorney argued the closing documents contained provisions,

including interest and rents, that were not agreed to in the mediated settlement agreement. The

trial court ordered the parties to brief their arguments and submit them to the court.

In July 2015, the trial court again held a hearing at which Carlton’s attorney noted that

Joyce’s attorney had filed a motion to withdraw and expressed his concern that, if the check for

$25,000 was not deposited in the registry of the court before counsel’s withdrawal, it was not

–3– clear where the check was going to go or whether it would clear. The trial court directed that the

$25,000 check be deposited in the registry of the court and granted Joyce’s counsel’s motion to

withdraw.

On December 10, 2015, the trial court issued a letter ruling that the mobile home stayed

with the property; Carlton was ordered to remove any tires and metal left behind at the property;

the parties were to execute closing documents by December 31, 2015; the fencing at the property

was to remain “as is”; and Carlton was not to receive any income for any farm operation for

2015. The letter ruling further directed that the property division was to follow what was agreed

to in mediation. The same day, the trial court issued a final decree of divorce directing that

Joyce purchase the Petty Farm and dividing the community property according to the terms of

the mediated settlement agreement. As to the motions to enforce, the decree ordered Joyce to

pay Carlton $4000 and ordered Carlton to vacate the Petty Farm by March 15, 2015. All other

relief sought by the parties’ motions to enforce the mediated settlement agreement were in all

things denied. This appeal followed.

In her first issue, Joyce argues the issue of her entitlement to post driver attachments was

“unilaterally determined” by Carlton’s counsel and was never brought before the trial court. In

her second issue, Joyce argues Carlton is liable for property taxes on the Petty Farm. In her third

issue, Joyce argues Carlton has failed to pay amounts owed on 2012 taxes. In her fourth issue,

Joyce argues Carlton should be required to pay taxes on Joyce’s income and oil money that was

used for community expenses for the 2013 tax year. In her summary of the argument, Joyce

argues the trial court erred in “not allowing closing arguments or written statements and by

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Joyce Regina McCray v. Carlton Dale McCray, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joyce-regina-mccray-v-carlton-dale-mccray-texapp-2017.