Ronald C. Gaskin v. Leanne J. Gaskin

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2006
Docket02-06-00039-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Ronald C. Gaskin v. Leanne J. Gaskin (Ronald C. Gaskin v. Leanne J. Gaskin) 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
Ronald C. Gaskin v. Leanne J. Gaskin, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

                                               COURT OF APPEALS

                                                 SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                                                                FORT WORTH

                                        NO. 2-06-039-CV

RONALD C. GASKIN                                                            APPELLANT

                                                   V.

LEANNE J. GASKIN                                                                APPELLEE

                                              ------------

            FROM THE 362ND DISTRICT COURT OF DENTON COUNTY

                                MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]

I.  Introduction

In five issues, Appellant Ronald C. Gaskin complains about the mediation and arbitration process surrounding his divorce as well as the final property division.  We affirm.


II. Background


This is the case of the much-maligned Mediated Settlement Agreement (MSA).  In December of 2004, Ronald Gaskin filed for divorce from his wife of fifteen years, Leanne Gaskin, who responded with an answer and a counterpetition.  The trial court ordered mediation, and it occurred on March 22, 2005, with Ronald appearing pro se,[2] his attorney having withdrawn prior to the mediation.  According to Ronald, A[a]fter an all[-]day discussion of terms, the parties came to an agreement[,] and it was initially reduced to writing by the mediator and presented to [Ronald].@  The parties filed the resulting MSA the following day, and it is the genesis of this appeal.  It is the position of Ronald that after he agreed to the MSA, the mediator, Mr. Ogilvie, altered it Asurreptitiously@ by substituting a different page in the MSA from that seen by Ronald; this altered MSA was then filed with the court. Additionally, Ronald argues that the MSA Ahad been altered in some manner@ and apparently made Ronald, and not Ronald and Leanne, responsible for any delinquent tax liability that might arise for the period of time during which they were married.  He testified, however, that AI=ve always paid all my taxes.  I owe the government nothing.  They=ve never audited me in the past 45 years.  So I have a very clean record with the IRS.@ 



Specifically, Ronald asserts that he Ared-lined@ the original proposed MSA which read, AHusband will be solely liable for all federal income tax[es] . . . ,@ to read, AHusband and wife will be jointly liable for all federal income tax[es] . . . ,@ and he also added A1987 Stanza@ to the list of his separate property, and this latter change did appear in the final filed document.  In other words, the original Ronald-only language appeared in the filed MSA and not the Ronald-and-Leanne change red-lined by Ronald.  Why would Mr. Ogilvie supposedly participate in such nefarious activities?  According to Ronald, it occurred because Leanne=s attorney, Mr. Jeter, maligned Ronald in front of the mediator.[3]  Ronald also asserts that he contacted the mediator, who told him the problem was minor and easily corrected.  While somewhat unclear, Ronald asserts that he read the final proposed agreement presented to him by the mediator before he signed it and did not notice any errors.[4]  It likewise appears Athrough a glass, darkly@[5] to be the mediator=s position that he did not substitute any altered pages and that the filed MSA was the one that Ronald Aleisurely@ read and contained the tax language to which Ronald now objects.

The essence of the MSA was that Leanne would be paid immediately from Ronald=s 401(k) account, valued at $240,000, for her interest in the homestead, plus, according to Ronald, Aother financial considerations such as alimony,A and the remaining monies in that account would be split between the parties.  The only exception, according to Ronald, was that he was allowed to keep in their entirety any 401(k)=s in her name that he funded.  This went to the $15,000 portion of her equity in the marital residence.

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Ronald C. Gaskin v. Leanne J. Gaskin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ronald-c-gaskin-v-leanne-j-gaskin-texapp-2006.