Munzer Adel Mohammed v. Shaun Rochelle Mohammed

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 10, 2024
Docket02-23-00449-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Munzer Adel Mohammed v. Shaun Rochelle Mohammed (Munzer Adel Mohammed v. Shaun Rochelle Mohammed) 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
Munzer Adel Mohammed v. Shaun Rochelle Mohammed, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________ No. 02-23-00449-CV ___________________________

MUNZER ADEL MOHAMMED, Appellant

V.

SHAUN ROCHELLE MOHAMMED, Appellee

On Appeal from the 233rd District Court Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 233-711439-22

Before Sudderth, C.J.; Bassel and Wallach, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Bassel MEMORANDUM OPINION

I. Introduction

Appellant Munzer Adel Mohammed (Husband) appeals from a final divorce

decree that dissolved his marriage to Appellee Shaun Rochelle Mohammed (Wife). In

seven issues,1 Husband argues generally that the trial court abused its discretion by

failing to grant a joint motion for continuance, that the property division was not just

and right, and that the trial court abused its discretion by ordering Husband to pay a

$62,500 judgment in monthly installments that exceed his entire monthly income. We

affirm the parties’ divorce, but because there are no pleadings to support the portions

of the final decree reconstituting the community estate and ordering Husband to pay

Wife $62,500 and because there is no evidence to support treating the $62,500 as a

reimbursement claim, we reverse the trial court’s division of the community estate,

and we remand this case to the trial court for a new trial on the composition of the

marital estate and to make a just-and-right property division consistent with this

opinion.

II. The Trial

It is uncontested that the parties were married for over thirty-nine years and

that they had six children together—none of whom were minors at the time of the

1 Husband’s amended brief that was filed on May 7, 2024, numbers his issues one through five and then seven and eight, omitting a sixth issue. For consistency, we use the same numbering to match Husband’s brief, but we note that he presents a total of seven—not eight—issues.

2 divorce. The parties’ stories differ regarding the ownership of their assets and the life

that Husband lived overseas during the latter part of the marriage. Wife contended

that Husband had a second wife in Jordan while Husband maintained that the woman

was simply his live-in nurse.

A. Wife’s Testimony

According to Wife, in 1996, the parties purchased the properties located at 208

Slaughter Street and 210 Slaughter Street in Arlington; each property had two

duplexes on it, and the buildings were enumerated 208A, 208B, 210A, and 210B.

Years later, the parties “signed 208 over to the children” and used 210 Slaughter

Street as the marital residence (the 210 residence).

Also according to Wife, at the end of 2003, the parties began the purchase of a

house in Jordan and wired $40,000 to $50,000 from their Bank of America account

for the purchase. She further explained that the house was not inherited from

Husband’s family; they purchased it from family friends.2 The Jordan house had two

apartments, which Husband and Wife rented to third parties. Husband moved to

Jordan first to prepare the home, and Wife and the children moved to Jordan in 2004.

They lived in the home as a family for approximately seven years.

2 Wife testified that the house was initially purchased under her brother-in-law’s name because she and Husband were not in Jordan at that time but that ownership was later transferred to Husband’s name. One of the Mohammeds’ sons was with Husband when the deed was transferred into Husband’s name.

3 In 2008, Husband took out a loan for $82,400 secured by the 210 residence and

used the money to purchase a property in “Palestine” (the term used by the parties).

Husband ultimately sold this property but did not use it to pay off the loan. Wife said

that at the time of the trial, she was still making monthly payments of $650 to pay

down the loan, which had a balance of $35,356. Wife said that Husband had initially

contributed $620 monthly from his Social Security checks3 to pay down the loan but

that approximately three and a half years prior to the divorce trial, he had stopped

contributing.

Husband and Wife returned to the United States in 2010 for Husband to

undergo back surgery. But in 2014, Husband took his mother back to Jordan because

she did not want to die in the United States. Husband’s mother passed away in early

October 2014.

On October 31, 2014, while Husband was still in Jordan, Wife called him

because she had not heard from him in a few days; when he answered, she heard

music in the background. Husband said that the music was from his wedding party.

After that, Husband chose to stay in Jordan; Wife was not able to support their

children on Husband’s Social Security stipend, so she found employment. At the time

of the trial, she was a contract employee and was paid every two weeks with her take-

Wife said that Husband could not work like he used to due to his back. 3

Husband received Social Security disability payments as a result.

4 home pay ranging from $706.05 to $1,117.50 during the eight weeks preceding the

trial.

During the nine and a half years between the time that Husband left for Jordan

in 2014 and the trial in 2023, Wife said that he had spent only seventeen to eighteen

months in the United States.4 Wife testified that Husband predominantly lived in the

Jordan house with his other wife and her son, whom Husband provided for, and that

he was still collecting rent from leasing the two apartments that are on that property.

Wife estimated that the Jordan home was worth at least $450,000. Wife said that

Husband had made a lot of improvements to the property “even after [the family had]

left there and since he’[d] been married [to his other wife].”

With regard to the 210 residence, Wife relied on the Tarrant Appraisal

District’s market value of $273,952. Wife asked to be awarded the 210 residence and

said that Husband could have the Jordan home.

Wife agreed that she was seeking “a disproportionate share [of the community

estate] because of the . . . reimbursement claims” that she had pleaded and because of

the $82,400 that was spent to purchase the Palestine property but was never used to

pay off the 210 residence loan when the Palestine property was sold.

When Husband visited the United States, he stayed in 208B, which is part of 4

the 208 Slaughter Street duplex that the parties had conveyed to their children.

5 B. Son’s Testimony

Abdulahi Mohammed, one of the parties’ sons, testified that in the summer of

2015 when he was sixteen years old he had visited Husband in Jordan. Son testified

that Husband had introduced his second wife to him as “his wife”; she was living in

the Jordan home along with her child and her mother. Son testified that Husband

and his second wife slept in the same bedroom with the door locked.

Son said that after 2014, Wife was left to take care of him and his siblings and

that she had to find work. Son testified that Wife did not file for divorce immediately

because Husband “kept on saying that he was going to fix it, [that] he was going to be

better, [and that] he was going to be more fair, and it just never happened.”

Son was asked about one of Husband’s doctor visits that he attended. Son

testified that Husband had asked the doctor if he would be able to take Viagra due to

his health conditions.5

C.

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