Newsom v. Petrilli

919 S.W.2d 481, 1996 WL 148256
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 1, 1996
Docket03-95-00399-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 919 S.W.2d 481 (Newsom v. Petrilli) 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
Newsom v. Petrilli, 919 S.W.2d 481, 1996 WL 148256 (Tex. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

BEA ANN SMITH, Justice.

This appeal presents two questions: (1) Whether the original divorce decree contained a clerical error that allowed the trial court to enter a judgment nunc pro tunc dividing disability benefits; and (2) whether the disability benefits at issue are community property subject to division upon divorce. Because the answer to both questions is yes, we will affirm the trial court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND

Peggy Lynn Petrilli (formerly Peggy Lynn Newsom) and Tommy Newsom were divorced in 1988 after seventeen years of marriage. In 1990, Newsom was retired from the Austin Fire Department with a disability and began receiving monthly disability benefits of approximately $1700. The examining physician attributed Newsom’s disability at least in part to deterioration of a condition growing out of a head injury suffered prior to the marriage. Newsom did not notify appel-lee of the disability payments and did not remit to her any portion of the benefits received, which by the time of trial totalled approximately $85,000.

In 1994, after learning of Newsom’s disability benefits, Petrilli brought this action seeking to collect fifty percent of the disability benefits Newsom had earned during the marriage. The original divorce decree awards one-half of “Respondent’s” insurance, pension and retirement benefits to each party; it does not mention “Petitioner’s” employment benefits. Newsom, the only party who was employed at the time of the divorce, was the Petitioner; Petrilli, the Respondent, had not been employed for over fifteen years. 1 Petrilli argued that the reference to “Respondent’s” employment benefits was a clerical error in the original decree and asked the court to enter a nunc pro tunc judgment awarding one-half of the community interest in “Petitioner’s” employment benefits to each party. In the alternative, she asked the court to partition Newsom’s employment benefits if they had not been divided by the divorce decree. The trial court found that the substitution of Respondent for Petitioner was a clerical error and entered a nunc pro tunc judgment making the change, in effect awarding fifty percent of Newsom’s disability benefits earned during marriage to Petrilli. The trial court did not render judgment regarding the $85,000 in benefits that Newsom had already collected but ordered the parties to mediation to resolve this issue. In this same postdivorce hearing, the trial court denied Newsom’s request that his child support obligation be reduced, granted Pe-trilli’s motion to extend child support beyond eighteen years of age for the parties’ disabled son, and awarded attorney’s fees to Petrilli. Newsom does not complain of the child support decision or the attorney’s fee award in this appeal.

Newsom brings three points of error regarding the nunc pro tunc judgment: (1) that the error in the original decree was not *483 a clerical error that would permit the entry of a judgment nunc pro tunc; (2) that the disability benefits at issue here were his separate property not subject to division upon divorce; and (3) that, by clarifying what portion of the present disability benefits were community property, the court exceeded the bounds of a permissible nunc pro tunc judgment under Rule 316. Tex.R.Civ.P. 316. 2

CLERICAL ERROR

In his first point of error, appellant argues that substituting Respondent for Petitioner in the decree’s award of employment benefits was a judicial rather than a clerical error. We begin by noting that the divorce decree sets forth: “It is the intent of the court, Petitioner and Respondent to provide for an even 50/50 division between Petitioner and Respondent of all community debts, all non-exempt community property, and all [exempt] community property....” This Court must construe the original judgment “as a whole toward the end of harmonizing and giving effect to all the court has written.” Constance v. Constance, 544 S.W.2d 659, 660 (Tex.1976). To divide “Petitioner’s” employment benefits 50/50 would accomplish the intent of the parties; to divide “Respondent’s” employment benefits 50/50 would render the employment benefits provision meaningless, since respondent had no benefits arising out of her employment during marriage, and further would fail to make any award of a significant asset of the parties. The attorney who drafted the original decree testified that when Newsom’s attorney submitted a draft proposal awarding Newsom all of his retirement benefits, she objected and specifically changed the language to provide for an equal division of the employment benefits, to which the parties agreed. She further testified that in making the agreed upon change, she inadvertently provided for an equal division of “Respondent’s” rather than “Petitioner’s” employment benefits. We agree with the trial court that this was clearly a clerical error, not a “judicial” error as appellant claims.

This Court has distinguished judicial and clerical errors:

A clerical error is one which does not result from judicial reasoning or determination. For the judgment nunc pro tunc to be valid, the error must arise in the entry of the judgment, and not in its rendition. As a result, whenever the judgment entered by the court incorrectly records the judgment rendered, the error is clerical, so long as a product of judicial reasoning is not involved.

Nolan v. Bettis, 562 S.W.2d 520, 522 (Tex.Civ.App.—Austin 1978, no writ) (citations omitted).

Appellant relies on Dikeman v. Snell, 490 S.W.2d 183 (Tex.1973), to assert that an error made in a judgment prepared by an attorney becomes a “judicial” error when that judgment is entered by the court. Such an interpretation is clearly a misreading of that case and would eliminate any possibility of clerical error, since almost all judgments today are drafted by the successful attorney for the judge’s signature. In Dikeman, the original judgment required a property owner to build a fence constructed of specified materials, of a certain thickness running in a particular direction. Id. at 184. The nunc pro tunc judgment considerably altered the specifications to mandate an entirely different fence. Id. at 185. Because these modifications effected substantial changes and were not made to correct any clerical error, the appellate court held the nunc pro tunc judgment void. By contrast, there is satisfactory evidence that the use of the word “Respondent” in this original divorce decree was a clerical error, which the trial court was at liberty to amend through a judgment nunc pro tunc. We overrule the first point of error.

In his third point of error, Newsom complains that the judgment entered by the trial court more resembles a “clarification” order than a judgment nunc pro tunc. See

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

William Bates v. Melinda Bates
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2024
Eva Ramirez v. Eddie Ramirez, Jr.
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2019
Navas v. Navas
599 S.E.2d 479 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 2004)
Armando M. Garza v. Gray & Becker, P.C.
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2002
John Whitnel Thompson v. Vicky Jo Thompson
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2002
In Re Dryden
52 S.W.3d 257 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2001)
in RE: in the Interest of A. L. D. and L.L.D.
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2001
Thomas Dickens v. Connie Elizabeth Willis
Court of Appeals of Texas, 1997
Dickens v. Willis
957 S.W.2d 657 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1997)
Yoshiko Chaisson v. Aubin Joseph Chaisson, Jr.
Court of Appeals of Texas, 1996

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
919 S.W.2d 481, 1996 WL 148256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newsom-v-petrilli-texapp-1996.