Sue Walston v. Larry Walston

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 14, 1995
Docket10-94-00169-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Sue Walston v. Larry Walston (Sue Walston v. Larry Walston) 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
Sue Walston v. Larry Walston, (Tex. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

Walton v. Walton


IN THE

TENTH COURT OF APPEALS


No. 10-94-169-CV

&

No. 10-94-251-CV


     SUE WALSTON,

                                                                                              Appellant

     v.


     LARRY WALSTON,

                                                                                              Appellee


From the 19th District Court

McLennan County, Texas

Trial Court Nos. 92-3724-1 & 94-1348-1


O P I N I O N


      In these two causes we address Sue Walston's complaints arising out of her divorce from Larry Walston. She brings eleven points of error in cause number 10-94-169-CV, complaining that the court failed to enforce a premarital agreement, rendered judgment based on a jury verdict that characterized property without sufficient support in the evidence, and improperly allocated, and ordered paid, the parties' debts and liabilities. In cause number 10-94-251-CV she complains about the court's appointment of a receiver to sell the parties' home under the judgment in the divorce suit. We will reverse a portion of the court's characterization of the parties' property and the division of the community estate, but dismiss as moot her appeal from the receivership.

      Sue met Larry when she went to work as an executive secretary for Buffalo Airlines, an airfreight company operated by Larry. They married January 17, 1986. On the day of the wedding, they entered into a premarital agreement that had been drafted by a Washington, D.C., attorney who specialized in aviation law. Larry elected to sell Buffalo Airlines in early 1989 for roughly $2 million. The parties deposited cash proceeds of $1.525 million from the sale into joint accounts, and, additionally, a promissory note from the purchaser for $224,000 was made payable to both Larry and Sue. After paying debts of approximately $515,768, they used $750,000 of the proceeds to purchase certificates of deposits, in both names, and as the CDs matured, the funds were used to purchase municipal bonds, again in both names. Over time, portions of the proceeds were spent on income taxes, debt repayment, plane purchases, living expenses, and various other expenses.

      At trial, the parties disagreed over the characterization of certain assets. Among the disputed assets were nine types of municipal bonds, a promissory note, two airplanes, various airplane parts, a car, electronic equipment, furniture, tools, and a gun and parts collection. By jury question number one, the court allowed the jury to characterize and value this property. The jury placed a total value of $394,975 on the property. It also found that Sue owned 20% of seven types of the bonds and 50% of one of the planes as her separate property, for a total value of $54,000, and that Larry owned the rest of the assets as his separate property. The judgment varied from the jury's characterization of these assets and divided all of the property, except for the $10,000 gun collection, as 20% Sue's separate property and 80% Larry's separate property. The gun collection was awarded to Larry as 100% his separate property. Thus, by the court's division of the disputed property, Sue owned $76,995 of the assets as her separate property and Larry owned $307,980 of the assets as his separate property.

PROPERTY DIVISION (CAUSE NO. 10-94-169-CV)

      In her petition for a divorce, Sue pleaded that the parties' property should be divided according to the characterization in the agreement. Larry pleaded that the agreement should not be enforced because it was ambiguous concerning its application upon divorce. Sue attached a copy of the agreement to her amended petitions and introduced a copy into evidence at the trial. During the charge conference, Sue objected to submitting the list of property purchased with the proceeds from the sale of Buffalo Airways for the jury's characterization because: "All of these items contained on question number one, about which the jury is now being asked to render an opinion . . . is contemplated by and covered by the terms and conditions of the premarital agreement . . . ."

      After the jury returned the verdict dividing the property between Sue's and Larry's separate estates, i.e., finding none of the property to be community in character, Sue filed a motion to disregard the jury's findings and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. She again argued that "[t]he question of characterization of the property of the parties as contained in Question No. 1 . . . is governed by . . . the construction of the pre-marital agreement, which is a question of law for the Court." She also argued in her motion that "[t]he jury finding in regard to characterization is immaterial and does not govern the characterization of the property because that characterization is governed, as a matter of law, by the agreement of the parties." She requested that the court render judgment according to the scheme she set out in the motion to disregard.

      However, the court rendered judgment according to the findings of the jury regarding the ownership of the property gained from the sale of the airline, with the indicated adjustments. It did not make an express ruling on the enforceability or interpretation of the premarital agreement. Sue requested that the court enter findings of fact and conclusions of law regarding the agreement. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 296. When the court failed to file its findings and conclusions timely, she filed the proper notice of past due findings and conclusions. The court, however, also failed to respond to this reminder. See id. 297. Additionally, Sue filed a motion for a new trial, again urging that the court erred by failing to implement the premarital agreement and to divide the property according to the characterization in the agreement.

Enforcement of the Premarital Agreement

      Sue complains in her first point of error that the court did not divide the assets in accordance with the agreement and, in point three, that the court failed to make findings relating to the enforceability of the agreement. The agreement is presumptively enforceable. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 5.46 (Vernon 1993); Grossman v. Grossman, 799 S.W.2d 511, 513 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 1990, no writ). Larry bore the burden to demonstrate that the agreement was not enforceable if he desired to avoid its provisions. See id. He attempted to raise the common-law defense of ambiguity to avoid its effect. See Daniel v. Daniel

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Sue Walston v. Larry Walston, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sue-walston-v-larry-walston-texapp-1995.