Linda Maria Turner v. Lewis Allen Turner

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 31, 2012
Docket11-10-00192-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Linda Maria Turner v. Lewis Allen Turner (Linda Maria Turner v. Lewis Allen Turner) 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
Linda Maria Turner v. Lewis Allen Turner, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Opinion filed July 31, 2012

                                                                       In The

  Eleventh Court of Appeals

                                                                   __________

                                                         No. 11-10-00192-CV

                               LINDA MARIA TURNER, Appellant

                                                             V.

                                 LEWIS ALLEN TURNER, Appellee

                                   On Appeal from the 87th District Court

                                                             Leon County, Texas

                                                   Trial Court Cause No. D-07-151

                                            M E M O R A N D U M   O P I N I O N

            The issues in this appeal involve the trial court’s division of property upon divorce, the appropriateness of the trial court’s execution of the decree of divorce, and the amount and duration of the award of spousal maintenance.  We find no error in connection with any of those issues other than the issue of the duration of the award of spousal support.  We modify the judgment of the trial court to show that the spousal maintenance is limited to a term of three years.  Otherwise, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

            Linda Maria Turner and Lewis Allen Turner were married on January 1, 1961.  On March 16, 2007, Lewis filed a petition for divorce against Linda.  According to Lewis’s testimony, Linda and Lewis had been separated “[r]oughly eighteen years” at the time of the hearing in this case, but actually had ceased to live together as husband and wife “[a]bout six years” prior to the hearing.  That happened on December 10, 2003, when Linda shot Lewis.  He was involved with another woman.  Criminal charges for aggravated assault with a deadly weapon were filed against Linda, but a jury acquitted her of that charge.  Lewis also testified that Linda had awakened him one night by hitting him in the head with an electric screwdriver and choking him with a silver necklace.

            Lewis began seeing the other woman in early 2003.  Linda had one child, Nathanial Edward Mendez.  Nathaniel was not Lewis’s son, but Lewis raised him as his own.  Lewis and Linda had one child together, Sammie, a daughter; Sammie was forty-five at the time of the trial of this case.  On July 8, 2003, Lewis and Linda, in an effort to protect their property for their children, executed a “Partition and Exchange Agreement.”  The agreement was also entered so that Lewis and Linda could both work the farms and a tire business that they had started some years earlier in Splendora.  In order to effectuate the agreement, Lewis claims that he executed deeds of certain real property to Sammie and certain real property to Nathaniel, but asserts that the deeds should have contained a reservation of a life estate in his favor.  Instead, the deeds provided that the property was not to be sold during his lifetime.  Correction deeds were prepared to include the life estate reservation.  Sammie approved the correction deed, but Nathaniel did not.

After Linda shot him, Lewis filed a lawsuit against her in Montgomery County.  In that lawsuit, Lewis sought to rescind the agreement, to recover damages for Linda’s breach of the agreement, and to recover damages for infliction of bodily injury and intentional infliction of emotional distress.  The trial court granted all the relief that Lewis requested.  On appeal, the Beaumont Court of Appeals, among other things, held that, under these circumstances, Lewis could not recover damages for breach of the agreement and also obtain a judgment for rescission.  Turner v. Turner, No. 09-06-00570-CV, 2008 WL 2522083, at *4 (Tex. App.—Beaumont June 26, 2008, pet. denied) (mem. op.).  The appellate court modified the trial court’s judgment to delete the award of rescission.  Id.

            In her first point of error, Linda asserts that the trial court erred when it granted an unequal division of the property.  She asserts in her second point of error that the trial court erred “when it awarded real property to Lewis Allen Turner after he had executed the Partition and Exchange Agreement, along with deeds, having the undivided interest of Lewis Allen Turner conveyed to the children.”  In her third point of error, Linda claims that the trial court erred when it set aside the Partition and Exchange Agreement.  Linda, in her fourth point of error, maintains that the trial court erred and abused its discretion when it awarded Linda’s separate property to Lewis.  Linda takes the position that Lewis is, in effect, attempting to relitigate the issue of rescission.  She claims that the final outcome in the Montgomery County lawsuit prevents further litigation relative to the agreement in this case under the doctrine of res judicata.  The trial court disagreed and found, in this case, that the agreement did not address the character of the property, nor did it address all the property.  It further found that the agreement was vague, ambiguous, and unenforceable as to the character of the property.  The trial court also held that the agreement did not set out the methods by which the respective interests might be determined. The trial court went on to find that there had never been an adjudication of the “legality nor for ambiguity, nor for characterization, nor for disposition of the property.”  Therefore, found the trial court, the Montgomery County case was not res judicata of the issues in this case.

            Laying aside any issues involving rights of persons not a party to a determination of issues involving the agreement, even if we were to agree with Linda’s position, we do not believe that we reach that issue.  As Lewis points out in his brief, Leon County Local Rule 4.8A, approved by the Texas Supreme Court on February 22, 2006, provides that the parties are to file proposed property division statements in domestic relations cases related to divorce.  12th, 87th, & 278th (Tex.) Dist. Ct. Loc. R. 4.8A (Leon County) (approved in Misc. Docket No. 06-9036; available at http://www.supreme.courts.state.tx.us/miscdocket/06/06903600.pdf).  Leon County Local Rule 4.8D, approved by the supreme court at the same time, provides that, if a party fails to file the proposed statement, the court may adopt “as stipulated the information filed by the complying party.  The non-complying party will be prohibited from contesting the accuracy of the information presented by the complying party.”  Id. Rule 4.8D.

            Lewis filed his proposed property division statement on February 16, 2010, and a final one on March 1, 2010.  Linda neither filed a statement of her own nor did she object to the proposed property division statement that Lewis filed.  The trial court refers to these provisions in its findings of fact and conclusions of law.  Lewis’s proposed division contained property divisions, descriptions, and values.  Under the proposal, Linda was to receive a net interest in community property awarded to her of $473,840.94, or 48.07% of the net community estate.

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Linda Maria Turner v. Lewis Allen Turner, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linda-maria-turner-v-lewis-allen-turner-texapp-2012.