Kaitlyn E. Oliver v. Philip David Oliver

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 12, 2020
Docket09-18-00208-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Kaitlyn E. Oliver v. Philip David Oliver (Kaitlyn E. Oliver v. Philip David Oliver) 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
Kaitlyn E. Oliver v. Philip David Oliver, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont ____________________ NO. 09-18-00208-CV _______________________

KAITLYN E. OLIVER, Appellant

V.

PHILIP DAVID OLIVER, Appellee

On Appeal from the 410th District Court Montgomery County, Texas Trial Cause No. 17-07-08677-CV

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Kaitlyn E. Oliver (“Kaitlyn”) appeals from the trial court’s Final

Decree of Divorce. Kaitlyn argues the trial court erred in finding she committed

adultery and in failing to find her ex-husband Philip David Oliver (“David”) also

committed adultery. Kaitlyn also argues the trial court erred in its division of

property.

1 Kaitlyn and David were married on October 18, 2014. The couple ceased to

live together in April 2017. David filed an original petition for divorce and Kaitlyn

filed a counterpetition, and both parties subsequently filed amended pleadings. In

their original pleadings, both David and Kaitlyn alleged that the marriage was

insupportable as grounds for divorce. In the amended pleadings that were the live

pleadings at the time of trial, both David and Kaitlyn alleged the marriage was

insupportable and that the other party had committed adultery as grounds for

divorce. The matter was tried to the bench in March 2018. The trial court granted

the divorce “on the grounds of insupportability and adultery by Kaitlyn” and ordered

the following division of property:

• David was awarded the marital residence at 1912 Foxtail Place, funds in a Capital One bank account, an IRA E*Trade account, a Dynamic Risk 401(k) account other than $55,792.82 awarded to Kaitlyn, and all personal property in his possession.

• Kaitlyn was awarded funds in two Capital One bank accounts (different from the account awarded to David), a BOK Financial account, $55,792.82 to be paid from the Dynamic Risk 401(k), a 2015 Jeep Grand Cherokee, and all personal property in her possession.

• David was ordered to pay the balance of $152,000 on the promissory note on 1912 Foxtail Place, debts on two bank accounts, and any debts incurred solely by him since April 18, 2017.

2 • Kaitlyn was ordered to pay the promissory note on the Jeep Grand Cherokee, the debt on a bank account, and any debts incurred solely by her since April 18, 2017.

• The following property was decreed as David’s separate property: a Subaru, $29,584.30 from the Dynamic Risk 401(k), his wedding ring, and “$37,680.00 of separate property interest claim” in the marital home at 1912 Foxtail Place.

• The following property was decreed as Kaitlyn’s separate property: two Capital One bank accounts, $4,908 in her BOK Financial 401(k) account, her wedding and engagement rings, and “$28,560.00 of separate property interest claim” in the marital home at 1912 Foxtail Place.

• Each party was ordered to be responsible for his or her own attorney’s fees.

Kaitlyn appealed.

David’s Testimony and Evidence

David testified that the marriage came to an end because he and Kaitlyn were

no longer compatible. According to David, the couple separated in April 2017 and

Kaitlyn “voluntarily moved out of the house[]” at that time, and they decided to

divorce in May. David testified that he believed Kaitlyn committed adultery before

they agreed to the divorce. He further testified that he found out who Kaitlyn was

dating when that man helped her move items out of the house. According to David,

because he was aware Kaitlyn was dating someone else, he thought it would be okay

if he also dated other people. David testified that he had been dating a woman since

3 the summer before trial, and he agreed that he had committed adultery “[p]ost-

divorce, mutual divorce agreement between us two[.]”

David testified that he and Kaitlyn bought the house at 1912 Foxtail Place

(“the Foxtail house”) together from Kaitlyn’s grandmother’s estate and the purchase

price was below the appraised value of the house. According to David, Kaitlyn’s

grandmother died on October 11, 2014, about a week before he and Kaitlyn got

married, and the grandmother “transferred” the house to Kaitlyn’s mother and uncle.

David testified that he and Kaitlyn paid $160,000 for the Foxtail house, which

appraised at $210,000 at the time of purchase. A copy of the sales contract was

admitted into evidence, showing a sales price of $160,000. David explained that one

reason the sales price was so much lower than the appraised value could have been

due to extensive termite damage or because the discounted price was a gift to him

and Kaitlyn as a couple. According to David, there was “nothing in writing to

indicate that there was some sort of separate gift to Katie.”

He further testified that the warranty deed was issued in both their names, that

the mortgage was in both names, and that the deed listed Kaitlyn’s mother and uncle

as the sellers. David testified that the deposit of $8,400 on the purchase of the Foxtail

house was made from his personal account. He also testified that he paid $2,800 for

a fence at the house in October 2014.

4 David testified that he understood Kaitlyn was completely moving out of the

Foxtail house, that he and Kaitlyn had talked about the house, and that he understood

they had agreed that David would continue to live in the house and would pay

Kaitlyn “whatever amount we deemed fair to stay in the house.” David was surprised

that Kaitlyn wanted to return to the house, and he testified that he did not believe

there was any documentation to back up Kaitlyn’s $60,000 separate property claim

on the house.

David testified that he put in “countless hours” remodeling the Foxtail house

and making improvements:

I helped renovate the kitchen and laundry room. I tiled the floor in the kitchen and laundry room. I tiled the backsplash. Installed the garbage disposal. Installed a new dishwasher, microwave oven. I have wired lights in the kitchen. I have retextured and painted the walls in the kitchen. I tiled the backsplash in the laundry room. I replaced the water heater myself in the laundry room. I have -- I remodeled the master bathroom in [] the master bedroom. I tore out the old shower and had to repair extensive termite damage in the corner of the house, and I tiled the master shower and installed a door. Installed two toilets in the house. I have recently repainted the hall bathroom and replaced all the hardware in that bathroom and installed the new light fixture. I have hung a ceiling fan in the master bedroom. I sodded the back yard. I have maintained all the outside of the house. Installed the new garage door and installed two new windows in the house.

...

[Since Kaitlyn moved out,] I painted the hall bathroom. I put all new hardware in that bathroom, and I hung a new light fixture. I have -- I had to replace the garage door, and then I replaced two windows in the 5 formal living room and I -- I have also painted a few other things, touching up and patching holes in walls.

. . . The garage door broke, and I had to have it replaced and that was about $725. And I -- recently a couple windows got broken in the formal living room. Dog jumped on a chair, fell into the window, and it broke. So I had to replace those. That was $684. And I have done other improvements, such as I planted the flowerbed in the back yard and spent around $200 on plants with that. And I also -- I kind of renovated the hall bathroom and bought supplies to paint, and I changed out the hardware and changed out the lighting fixture which, all told, that was around $200 as well.

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