Robert Finch II v. Angela Stegman

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 6, 2020
Docket01-19-00109-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Robert Finch II v. Angela Stegman (Robert Finch II v. Angela Stegman) 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
Robert Finch II v. Angela Stegman, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Opinion issued August 6, 2020

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-19-00109-CV ——————————— ROBERT FINCH II, Appellant V. ANGELA STEGMAN, Appellee

On Appeal from the 387th District Court Fort Bend County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 17-DCV-242295

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellee, Angela Stegman, sued appellant, Robert Finch II, for divorce and

asserted a claim for reimbursement. Finch answered, filed a counterpetition for

divorce claiming that the parties had been informally married in 1998, prior to their

formal marriage in 2009, and asserted a counterclaim for reimbursement. The parties’ competing reimbursement claims concerned two houses purchased in

Stegman’s name in 1998 and 2007. After a bench trial, the trial court ruled that Finch

and Stegman were married in 2009, denied Finch’s claim that the parties were

informally married before 2009, and confirmed that the houses were Stegman’s

separate property. The final divorce decree awarded Finch a portion of Stegman’s

retirement accounts and denied the parties’ competing reimbursement claims. On

appeal, Finch challenges: (1) the factual sufficiency of the evidence supporting the

trial court’s finding that no informal marriage existed before 2009; (2) the trial

court’s denial of Finch’s reimbursement claim; and (3) the trial court’s division of

the parties’ retirement accounts.

We affirm.

Background

Finch met Stegman in 1985 while they both lived in Michigan.1 They began

dating in 1992 and Stegman moved in with Finch in 1993. Finch testified that he

gave Stegman a ring in 1993 and asked her, “Would you be with me” or “Would you

be my wife” while sitting on a couch at his parents’ house in Michigan, and Stegman

responded, “I’d love to be with you.” Finch testified that he believed the parties were

1 When, as here, an appellee does not file a brief, the appellate court may accept any factual statement made in the appellant’s brief as true. See TEX. R. APP. P. 38.1(g) (“In a civil case, the court will accept as true the fact stated [in the appellant’s brief] unless another party contradicts them. The statement [of facts] must be supported by record references.”).

2 informally married until he subsequently learned that Michigan does not recognize

common-law marriage.

In 1998, the parties decided to move to Texas for a warmer climate and to be

near Finch’s two children from a previous marriage. Finch wanted to buy a house in

Texas and he was unemployed at the time, so he came to Texas before Stegman to

look for a house. He found one in Harris County that he intended to buy, but he was

not approved for a loan. Stegman was approved for a loan, and she used some of the

proceeds from the sale of her Michigan house for the down payment. Finch also sold

his house in Michigan and received “[a]bout 25–, 26,000 [dollars] for sure,” which

he contributed to the purchase of the Harris County house. Finch signed the deed of

trust in Stegman’s name “as [Stegman’s] agent and attorney-in-fact.” The deed of

trust listed Stegman as “an unmarried woman” and the sole borrower on the loan.

The Harris County house was conveyed solely to Stegman.2

Finch testified that he and Stegman agreed to be informally married again

after moving to Texas but before buying the Harris County house in 1998. Finch did

not offer details of the agreement to be married, but he answered “yes” when his

counsel asked if he and Stegman “agree[d] to be married in Texas in 1998” and if

they lived together afterwards. Finch testified that he did not “think [he and

2 The record does not include the warranty deed for the Harris County house.

3 Stegman] really even brought it up. [Finch] thought [they] were married and since

[they] lived together here in Texas.”

In 2007, Finch and Stegman decided to buy a second, larger house in Fort

Bend County because Stegman’s mother had moved in with them. Finch did not

qualify for the mortgage loan because of identity-theft issues, so Stegman obtained

a loan in her name and the Fort Bend County house was conveyed to her “as an

unmarried person.” The loan on the Fort Bend County house was refinanced in 2010,

after the parties formally married, but Stegman testified that Finch was not included

as a borrower on the refinanced loan. The loan was again refinanced in 2017, listing

both Stegman and Finch, as “wife and husband,” together as borrowers for the first

time. Stegman did not sell the Harris County house, and she owned it at the time of

the underlying divorce proceedings.

The parties were married in a formal ceremony in Texas on July 8, 2009, and

they never had children together. On June 1, 2017, Stegman filed an original petition

for divorce on the grounds of insupportability and cruelty. See TEX. FAM. CODE ANN.

§§ 6.001, 6.002. She asserted a claim for reimbursement and asked for a

disproportionate share of the parties’ community estate based on her reimbursement

claim and on Finch’s alleged fault in breaking up the marriage and wasting

community assets. She also asserted a claim for intentional infliction of emotional

4 distress based on a 2011 motor-vehicle accident that Finch had allegedly caused

while driving alone after using heroin, which Finch denied.

Finch answered and generally denied Stegman’s allegations. He filed a

counterpetition for divorce, claiming that the parties were informally married in

September 1998. He also asserted a counterclaim for reimbursement.

In December 2018, the trial court held a two-day bench trial. Stegman

admitted that she and Finch had lived together from 1993 through the time of trial

but denied that they had agreed to be married before 2009. She supported her

testimony with the parties’ marriage certificate. Stegman admitted that Finch had

given her a ring in Michigan, but she denied that she had agreed to be married to

Finch. She testified that she did not wear the ring because she did not like it, and she

explained that “[Finch] said it was a cubic zirconia, that we would get something

better when we could afford it. I – I’ve never worn it, and he knows that.”

Stegman also produced evidence proving that she purchased the Harris

County and Fort Bend County houses in her name alone prior to the parties’

marriage. She produced the 1998 deed of trust for the Harris County house, which

listed the borrower as “Angela Stegman, an unmarried woman” and showed that

Finch had signed the documents as Stegman’s “agent and attorney-in-fact,” not as

her husband. She also produced a 2018 printout from the Harris County Appraisal

District website listing Stegman as the sole owner of the Harris County house. To

5 support her ownership of the Fort Bend County house, Stegman produced the

general warranty deed conveying it to “Angela J. Stegman, an unmarried person” in

November 2007, a printout from the Fort Bend County Tax Office website listing

only Stegman’s name in relation to ownership of the house, and a deed of trust for a

refinance loan on the house that listed Stegman and Finch, “wife and husband,” as

borrowers for the first time in 2017.

Stegman asked the court to award her a disproportionate share of the

community assets. She testified that she consistently maintained employment during

the parties’ 25-year relationship, including working two jobs for 13 years, and she

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