Rosita De La Paz v. Adan De La Paz

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 7, 2009
Docket13-07-00297-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Rosita De La Paz v. Adan De La Paz (Rosita De La Paz v. Adan De La Paz) 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
Rosita De La Paz v. Adan De La Paz, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-07-00297-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

ROSITA DE LA PAZ, Appellant,

v.

ADAN DE LA PAZ, Appellee.

On appeal from the 28th District Court of Nueces County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Garza and Vela Memorandum Opinion by Justice Garza

This case involves an acrimonious divorce between appellant, Rosita De La Paz,

and appellee, Adan De La Paz. Rosita appeals the final divorce decree entered by the trial

court on February 22, 2007. By three issues, which can be categorized properly as two,

Rosita contends that: (1) the trial court abused its discretion in making an unreasonable

1 and arbitrary division of the marital estate; and (2) she was denied her due process right

to be heard when the trial court denied her request for more time to seek counsel. We

affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

On December 1, 2004, Rosita filed an original petition for divorce on the grounds

that the marriage had become insupportable because of discord or conflict of personalities.

In her petition, Rosita requested a temporary restraining order against Adan, temporary

orders concerning the use of the marital property, temporary exclusive use of the marital

residence, and temporary support, among other things. In addition, Rosita attached an

affidavit stating:

I believe that my husband, Adan De La Paz[,] has transferred property belonging to our marital estate without my knowledge or consent and without making any accounting for the proceeds from doing so. Based on his history of having done so and his statements to me concerning our property, I believe he intends to continue to do so.

Adan was personally served with a copy of the petition on December 1, 2004. On

December 15, 2004, Adan filed his original counter-petition for divorce, original answer to

Rosita’s petition, and a motion for temporary orders, which mirrored Rosita’s request for

temporary orders.

On May 18, 2006, the trial court conducted the final hearing in this case.1 A final

decree of divorce was signed by the trial court on June 2, 2006. The final decree awarded

specific property to each spouse as their sole and separate property. Notably, each were

awarded (1) a one-half undivided interest in 1533 16th Street in Corpus Christi, Texas, and

1 Adan did not appear at this hearing.

2 (2) a one-half undivided interest in 1537 16th Street in Corpus Christi. In addition, Rosita

was awarded a full interest in 1541 16th Street in Corpus Christi as her sole and separate

property.

Adan filed a motion for new trial on July 3, 2006. In his motion, Adan explained that

he did not participate in the May 18, 2006 final hearing because he was not provided with

notice of the trial setting. Adan demonstrated that notice was sent to 1541 16th Street in

Corpus Christi, where he and Rosita resided during the course of the divorce proceedings.

Adan suggested that Rosita intercepted the notice and informed him that the case had

already been dropped. Furthermore, Adan argued that the trial court awarded Rosita

property that was his separate property. In support of his motion for new trial, Adan

executed an affidavit where he stated the following:

I was not aware of the trial setting in this case on May 18, 2006. If a notice was mailed to me at 1541 16th Street, Corpus Christi, Texas 78404, I did not receive it, nor did I have any other notice of that setting. I was not the only person residing in that house at the time. Among others, my wife, Rosita De La Paz, the Petitioner in this case, was living there. I would not have been expecting a notice, since my wife had led me to believe that this case, which was filed in 2004, had been dropped. I also never received a notice that a judgment had been entered in this case. I only learned of it on June 29, 2006, when I went to pay taxes on the house where I was living and found out that it was no longer in my name. I had lived with my wife and children in that house continuously throughout the divorce proceedings and since the decree was signed.

....

The real property at 1541 16th Street, Corpus Christi, Texas, that was awarded to my wife was actually my separate property. I owned it before we were married. The real properties at 1533 16th Street and 1537 16th Street, which were awarded half to me and half to my wife, are owned by my mother. I had owned them briefly, but they were transferred to my nephew, Robert De La Paz Alvarez, well before the divorce took place, and he later transferred them to my mother. I had gotten them from my sister, Terry, as my separate property[.] No community funds were used to purchase it from

3 her. The property was exchanged among my family members depending on who could keep up the taxes at any given time. The transfer to my nephew was not done with any intent to defraud the community and was never part of the community property. Except for a little money applied to property taxes, no funds of ours were expended on the property. We put more money into the bakery that my wife claims as her separate property than we did in the real property at 1533 and 1537 16th Street.

The division of the actual community estate is disproportionately in favor of my wife.

The trial court subsequently denied Adan’s motion for new trial on August 2, 2006.

On August 11, 2006, Adan filed a motion for leave of court and an amended motion for

new trial, advancing many of the same arguments as contained in the original motion for

new trial but with additional analysis and documentary evidence. Notably, in his amended

motion for new trial, Adan stated that the marriage between he and Rosita occurred in

1995. The trial court signed an order granting Adan’s motion for leave and amended

motion for new trial on August 22, 2006. The order acknowledged that the parties had

agreed to the motion and that the trial court’s June 2, 2006 final decree was invalid

because Adan neither received notice of nor participated in the earlier trial setting. Thus,

the June 2, 2006 final decree was vacated.

The trial court set the case for a final hearing on December 15, 2006. Rosita then

filed a first amended original petition for divorce on November 21, 2006. In this filing,

Rosita alleged that she and Adan were married by common law on January 24, 1989, and

thereafter entered into a ceremonial marriage on September 10, 1994.2 At the scheduled

2 Rosita and Adan’s m arriage license was issued on Septem ber 6, 1994, and was filed in the Nueces County public records on Septem ber 12, 1994.

4 December 15, 2006 hearing, the trial court granted Rosita’s request for more time to retain

counsel.

The final hearing was then rescheduled for February 2, 2007. Prior to opening

arguments, Rosita requested additional time from the trial court to retain counsel, but her

request was denied. After hearing arguments, the trial court took the matter under

advisement. In the meantime, Adan submitted a proposed final divorce decree. On

February 19, 2007, Rosita filed objections to Adan’s proposed final decree of divorce. In

her objections, Rosita alleged that Adan’s proposed distribution of the marital estate was

unfair because: (1) the proposed decree ordered the sale of 1541 16th Street, where she

had lived for over fifteen years; and (2) it divested her of her previously granted community

interest in 1533 and 1537 16th Street while Adan received “all of the interest in the other

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