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Articles Posted in divorce

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Texas Court Cannot Stop Divorce Trial Without Allowing Parties to Present Their Cases

While videoconferencing technology allowed certain court proceedings to occur and cases to move forward during the pandemic when in-person proceedings were not available, the technology is not without its problems in a court setting.  Some individuals, especially those living in rural areas, may not have access to a strong internet…

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Texas Appeals Court Upholds Alcohol Restriction in Divorce Decree

In dealing with Texas custody issues, courts must focus on the children’s best interest. Courts sometimes conclude that the best interest of the children requires certain restrictions on the parents when the children are in their care.  A father recently challenged a provision in the divorce decree prohibiting the parents…

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Discrepancies Between Texas Divorce Decree and Property-Division Agreement

When parties to a Texas divorce agree to a property division, the final judgment based on the agreement must strictly comply with it.  The trial court cannot add, change, or leave out material terms.  A final judgment based on a property division agreement  must be set aside if it is…

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Texas Court Dismisses Case Seeking to Void Divorce Due to Bigamy

A party may challenge a judgment as void through either a collateral or direct attack. Generally, a Texas divorce decree is only subject to collateral attack if the court lacked jurisdiction over the parties or subject matter.  Other errors must be challenged through a direct attack.  A direct attack can…

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Life Insurance and Texas Divorce

People commonly obtain life-insurance policies and name their spouse as the beneficiary. They do not always remember to update the beneficiary designation when they get divorced.  Under Texas law, designation of a spouse as beneficiary before a divorce will only remain effective after the divorce in certain circumstances.  Generally, either…

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Condition Precedent to Receiving Contractual Support Payments in Texas Divorce Agreement

When parties to a Texas divorce reach an agreement, the agreement may place conditions on certain obligations.  A “condition precedent” is something that must occur before a party has a right to performance of an obligation by the other party. In a recent case, a mother challenged a trial court’s…

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Separate Property and Tort Claims in Texas Divorce

Property in the possession of either spouse at the time of dissolution of marriage is presumed to be community property under Texas family law.  A spouse may rebut this presumption by tracing and clearly identifying the separate property. That spouse must present evidence of the time and means of acquisition…

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Texas Final Divorce Decree Constituted Consent Judgment after Revocation of MSA

“A scroll of a Divorce Decree, tied with a black ribbon on a mahogany desk, with a dead white rose buttonhole from the Wedding Day, with a black pen. Copy space..” A Texas Mediated Settlement Agreement (“MSA”) must generally include language that it is not subject to revocation, be signed…

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Texas Divorce Abated Upon Husband’s Death

When a party in a Texas civil lawsuit dies, the case may proceed if the cause of action survives the death of the party. Tex.R.Civ.P. 150. Generally, when the defendant in Texas civil lawsuit dies, the plaintiff may petition for a “scire facias” to require the administrator, executor, or heir…

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Enforcement of High Net Worth Texas Divorce

When a couple has complex and high-value assets, the actions required to achieve the property division may drag out long after their Texas divorce.  The parties may need to refinance or liquidate certain assets.  These ongoing transactions can result in additional disputes and possibly enforcement actions by one or sometimes…

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