Mark A. Metzger, Jr. v. Patricia Metzger Westbo

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 7, 2007
Docket01-04-00893-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Mark A. Metzger, Jr. v. Patricia Metzger Westbo (Mark A. Metzger, Jr. v. Patricia Metzger Westbo) 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
Mark A. Metzger, Jr. v. Patricia Metzger Westbo, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion issued June 7, 2007





In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas



NO. 01-04-00893-CV



MARK A. METZGER JR., Appellant



V.



PATRICIA WESTBO METZGER, Appellee (1)



On Appeal from the 247th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2002-21703



MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant, Mark A. Metzger Jr., appeals from an "Order on Motion for Clarification of Prior Decree of Divorce" rendered between him and appellee, Patricia Westbo Metzger ("Westbo"). We determine (1) whether Metzger sufficiently briefed two of his appellate challenges; (2) whether he preserved his challenge that the trial court erred in rendering the order because he had withdrawn his consent to the mediated agreement on which the order was based; and (3) whether the trial court had subject-matter jurisdiction to enter certain provisions of the order concerning stock divided in the divorce decree. We modify the order and affirm it as so modified.

Background

Metzger and Westbo divorced on July 1, 2002. The decree awarded each party, as his or her separate property, "[a]ll shares of stock personally owned." The divorce decree did not, however, name the shares of stock that each party personally owned. Neither party appealed the divorce decree, and it became final.

In October 2002, outside the trial court's plenary jurisdiction, Westbo moved for clarification of the divorce decree. In pertinent part, the clarification motion provided:

The Motion for Enforcement [sic] and Clarification of Prior Order [sic] is brought to modify, correct or reform the judgment previously entered in this case. . . . [Westbo] did not have legal counsel in this case and, instead, relied on the legal advice of [Metzger's] former counsel of record, Joe Alfred Izen, Jr. The filing of this Motion for Clarification of Prior Order is necessary to clarify exactly what was meant in Paragraph 5, page 4 of the Decree of Divorce [the provision that Westbo be awarded "[a]ll shares of stock personally owned"].



At the time of the granting of the divorce, [Westbo] and [Metzger] owned one-half of two Texas corporations. This divorce decree was unnecessarily ambiguous and thus a fraud on [Westbo's] property rights. . . . [T]he divorce decree . . . awarded each party "all shares of stock personally owned." It was known to [Metzger's] counsel for several years that such provision allowed each party to own 50% of the shares in two corporations formed during the coverture of marriage, i.e., Lacy Creekside, Inc., and Respiratory, Inc.



The problem in the ambiguous language was compounded by what happened on July 30, 2002, when [Westbo] went to the corporate offices of one of the two corporations owned equally by the parties and [Metzger] had removed everything from the premises without notice to [Westbo]. [Metzger's] attorney drafted and filed the Decree of Divorce. He should have known that allowing the parties to remain as equal owners, after divorce, in two corporations owned equally by each and formed during marriage, would lead to what happened on July 30, 2002 and create a problem and a denial of [Westbo's] property rights.



It would be an injustice to [Westbo] to allow the Decree of Divorce to stand as entered without clarification as to what legal rights accompany her award of stock in the two corporations owned both before divorce and after divorce with her ex-husband. [Westbo] requests the Court to grant the Motion for Clarification of Prior Order and resolve the matter of allowing the divorced spouses to continue as equal co-owners and define their respective rights in regard to the two corporations.



(Emphasis added.) In a response to a jurisdictional plea that Metzger filed, Westbo later represented that her motion to clarify sought only to "resolve the matter of naming for the divorced spouses which corporations they are equal co-owners [of] and define their respective rights in regard to the two corporations" and to state the "responsibilities, if possible, of the parties in the two corporations." Likewise, in a response to a summary-judgment motion filed by Metzger, Westbo represented that "[t]he answer to this question [of the corporations' names] is all [Westbo] seeks" by her clarification motion.

The parties eventually mediated and signed a settlement agreement ("the mediated settlement agreement"). The mediation, and thus the mediated settlement agreement, resolved matters not only relevant to Westbo's clarification motion, but also concerning a suit in Tyler for trespass to try title and property that appears not to have been divided by the divorce decree. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 9.203(a) (Vernon 2006) (allowing court that failed to dispose of property subject to division in final divorce or annulment decree to divide such property in matter that court deems just and right); see also id. § 9.004 (Vernon 2006) (providing that limitations of post-decree enforcement or clarification proceedings do not apply to property divided under Family Code subchapter that includes section 9.203(a)). In the portion pertinent to Metzger's appellate challenges, the mediated settlement agreement provided:

11. Westbo will sign over and Metzger is awarded 1,000 shares of stock in Lacy Creekside, Inc.



12. Westbo will disclaim and/or convey all right, title and interest in and to 1,000 shares of Respiratory, Inc. stock and use her Power of Attorney over Lucrettia Broyles to void the Revocation of the Broyles Trust and reinstate same and make said Trust irrevocable with Metzger and his children as the sole beneficiaries thereof and disclaim and/or convey any beneficial interests of Westbo and/or her children in or to such Trust. Westbo and her attorneys shall be provided drafts and final documents of such conveyances prior to the date of execution of same.



Westbo moved for entry of an order on the mediated settlement agreement; Metzger objected to her proposed order, although nothing in the record shows that he withdrew his consent to the mediated settlement agreement. The trial court signed the clarification order on June 18, 2004, reciting that the order was based on the mediated settlement agreement. The clarification order provided in pertinent part:

Additional Clarifying Orders



[T]he Court finds that the 1,000 shares of stock in Respiratory, Inc. are the property of The Wayne Elliott Broyles, Sr. and Lucretia Helen Broyles Trust Dated the 28th Day of April, 1995, Joe Alfred Izen, Jr. Trustee.

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Mark A. Metzger, Jr. v. Patricia Metzger Westbo, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mark-a-metzger-jr-v-patricia-metzger-westbo-texapp-2007.