Virginia Roe Burns v. Denis Lyons Burns

433 S.W.3d 189, 2014 WL 2134555, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 5590
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 22, 2014
Docket05-12-01494-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 433 S.W.3d 189 (Virginia Roe Burns v. Denis Lyons Burns) 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
Virginia Roe Burns v. Denis Lyons Burns, 433 S.W.3d 189, 2014 WL 2134555, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 5590 (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by

Justice MYERS.

In this divorce proceeding, the trial court made findings of fact and conclusions of law after a two-day bench trial and rendered a final decree of divorce. In the decree, the trial court divided the marital estate, awarded a reimbursement to the separate estate of appellee Denis Lyons Burns, and burdened specific separate property of appellant Virginia Roe Hinton 1 with an equitable lien to secure the judgment. In ten issues, Hinton complains of the trial court’s judgment. We modify the trial court’s judgment to delete the imposition of the equitable lien. As modified, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Background

Hinton and Burns were married on May 15, 2009. There are no children of the marriage. The parties were separated twice during their three-year marriage. Hinton filed for divorce on April 4, 2012. Burns filed a counter-petition seeking reimbursement for funds he alleged his separate estate had expended for the benefit of the community. A bench trial was held on September 12 and 13, 2012. Hinton, Burns, and several other witnesses testified.

The evidence offered at trial showed that both Burns and Hinton brought separate property to the marriage. Burns inherited sums from his family’s estate, and he owned several business entities. Hinton owned a home on Tolleson Drive in Celina, Texas (the “Celina home”). She also owned real property in Hill County, Texas as well as certain livestock. At trial, both parties offered expert testimony to trace the property each claimed as separate. Hinton offered the testimony of Stephen A. Fuqua. Burns is a certified public accountant and testified regarding a tracing of property he had prepared himself.

*192 The largest community asset consisted of seventy-seven acres of land in Cooke County, Texas owned by a limited liability company called The Big 0 Ranch LLC (the “Ranch LLC”). Hinton and Burns each owned fifty percent of this entity. The Ranch LLC purchased the land in June 2010 for a purchase price of $307,428, or approximately $4,000 per acre. The Ranch LLC made a down payment of $73,200.45, and the seller carried a note for $232,428. The parties agreed that the outstanding debt for the ranch at the time of trial was $211,000 on the seller’s note. The parties agreed that both Burns and Hinton contributed separate property funds for the purchase of the real estate and that Hinton’s contribution was $16,100. The parties agreed that Burns made a separate property contribution of approximately $40,000, but Burns also testified that he contributed an additional $20,000 of separate property that he borrowed from a Burns family trust. Burns testified that the fair market value of the ranch at the time of trial was $271,000, or approximately $3,500 per acre. Hinton contended that the value had increased to $5,000 per acre, but the trial court excluded expert opinion testimony offered by Hinton on this subject because she failed to designate her expert witness prior to trial.

Burns testified that he contributed his entire inheritance of approximately $288,-000 2 to the community. He also testified about several business entities. He testified that his accounting firm, the Burns Firm Ltd., existed before the marriage and was his separate property. He testified that the community borrowed $51,447 from the Burns Firm Ltd. during the marriage that was not repaid. BFI Development, Inc. is also an entity through which Burns did business prior to the marriage and in which Hinton claims no interest. Burns testified that the community borrowed $3,000 from BFI Development, Inc. during the marriage that was not repaid. He also testified that he is the sole owner of D. Burns Management, a separate entity from which the community borrowed $12,033. Burns testified that during the marriage, the community would periodically borrow money from these entities that was deposited into the checking account for the community and used for community expenses. Hinton also admitted that an entity known as Custer/Hedgecoxe was Burns’s separate property.

Hinton lives in the Celina home. The record reflects that at the time of the parties’ final separation, Burns was living in a trailer on the Cooke County ranch. The parties refer to this trailer as the “FEMA trailer.” The record also reflects that during the course of the divorce proceedings, Hinton removed both the trailer and the property in it from the ranch. In a pretrial hearing, the trial court ordered Hinton to return the trailer and the property in it to Burns, but at trial, Burns contended Hinton had returned only a few of the items in question. Hinton testified she had already returned everything except the FEMA trailer. The trial court also heard conflicting testimony on several other matters. Hinton testified that her horses and cattle had been removed from the ranch without her permission and she was unaware of their location until imme *193 diately before trial. Hinton also testified about loans she made to Burns prior to marriage; Burns contended he had repaid the loans in full. Hinton testified that a particular tractor had been a gift from Burns; Burns disagreed. Hinton requested that the Ranch LLC be divided; Burns testified that division would be “an absolute disaster.”

Neither party offered evidence regarding the total value of either the community estate or the parties’ separate estates. Accordingly, neither the divorce decree nor the trial court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law include findings on the total value of the assets and liabilities to be divided. Instead, the trial court made findings as to particular items of property that it characterized as separate or community property and divided the assets and liabilities of the marital estate. The trial court awarded the Ranch LLC, the property owned by it, and the associated debt to Burns. The trial court found that the FEMA trailer was community property and awarded it to Burns. A John Deere tractor claimed by both parties was confirmed as Hinton’s separate property and awarded to her. The trial court also confirmed that the Celina home, the Hill County property, two horses, one Black Angus cow, and two longhorn cows were Hinton’s separate property.

The trial court found that Burns’s separate estate was entitled to reimbursement in the amount of $62,000 from the community estate. The trial court awarded judgment in that amount to Burns and also imposed an equitable lien of $62,000 on Hinton’s separate property. The lien was divided into two parts. The court attributed $5,000 of the lien to the value of the FEMA trailer, and the remaining $57,000 “for reimbursement to [Burns] for contributions made with [his] separate property.” Both portions of the lien were imposed on “all property that Virginia Roe Burns owns,” including the Celina home, the Hill County property, two horses, one Black Angus cow, two longhorn cows, and the John Deere tractor. The trial court imposed the $5,000 lien “until the FEMA trailer is returned to Mr. Burns.” The divorce decree also provides that “to the extent legally permitted, Denis Lyons Burns is granted a possessory lien on these assets until the judgment is paid in full.” Burns concedes that the Celina home is Hinton’s homestead.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
433 S.W.3d 189, 2014 WL 2134555, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 5590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virginia-roe-burns-v-denis-lyons-burns-texapp-2014.