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Texas Divorce Attorney Blog

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Court of Appeals Finds Trial Court’s Division of $3 Million in Business Assets Improper

Property division in a Texas divorce can be complicated when there is a business involved.  In a recent case, a former husband challenged a property division that divided assets belonging to his business entities. According to the appeals court, the husband formed two businesses before the marriage.  He said he…

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Wife Awarded Oncologist Husband’s Patent Rights and Stock Distributions Post-Divorce

Certain assets, especially stocks or assets related to a business, may be held in the name of just one spouse, even if they are community property. In a Texas divorce, a court may impose a constructive trust requiring the spouse to transfer property to the other spouse. Tex. Fam Code…

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Court Finds Fraud Based on Husband’s Transfers of Funds to Adult Children in Texas High Net Worth Divorce

In a Texas divorce, “special community property” is community property that is under the sole management, control, and disposition of one spouse. Tex. Fam. Code § 3.102(a).  Although special community property is under the sole management, control, and disposition of one spouse, disposition of that property must be fair to…

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Texas Divorce Involving Potentially Conflicting Tax Provisions in Agreement

Although not always an issue in a Texas divorce, tax matters can become a significant issue, especially in high net worth divorces or divorces involving the division of a business. A Texas appeals court recently decided a second appeal in a case involving a mediated settlement agreement (“MSA”) with potentially…

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Texas Appeals Court Affirms Appointment of Receiver for Collection of Divorce Judgment

Sometimes a party to a Texas divorce may have difficulty collecting what has been awarded to them. Pursuant to the Texas turnover statute, a judgment creditor may ask the court to assist them in reaching the judgment debtor’s non-exempt property.  The court is authorized to take a number of actions,…

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Texas Appeals Court Reverses Wife’s Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress Judgment Against Husband

Sometimes parties to a Texas divorce can get embroiled in litigation beyond standard divorce claims.  A spouse may file a tort claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress (“IIED”) in a Texas divorce case.  To succeed on an IIED claim in Texas, a plaintiff has to show intentional or reckless…

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Texas Supreme Court Says Courts Must Consider Child’s Expenses Along with Child Support in Spousal Support Analysis

The Texas Family Code sets out the circumstances under which Texas spousal maintenance may be ordered. The court may order maintenance to a spouse only if they will lack sufficient property after the divorce to provide for their minimum reasonable needs.  The spouse must also meet one of three conditions,…

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Texas Home Confirmed Wife’s Separate Property Despite Deed Granting Interest to Husband

Property characterization can be a significant area of contention in Texas divorces, particularly in high net worth divorces or those in which one party entered the marriage with significantly more assets.  Texas law presumes that property possessed by either spouse during or on dissolution is community property.  That presumption may…

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Texas Appeals Court Affirms Order for Partition and Sale of Property after Divorce

Ideally, after a Texas divorce, the parties will cooperate and take any actions needed to sell or transfer property and resolve outstanding issues, but that does not always happen. A Texas appeals court recently considered a case in which a former wife alleged the former husband was preventing the sale…

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