OPINION
This is an appeal from a final divorce decree. In four issues, Lee Deforrest Bigelow challenges monetary awards made by the trial court in the decree. We affirm.
Reimbursement
In Lee’s first three issues, he asserts the trial court erred in its award of $29,934.00 based on Nancy’s claim for reimbursement. Lee contends in issues one and two that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the award; issue three challenges the trial court’s award of a “money judgment.”
The Texas Family Code requires the trial court to divide a marital estate in a “just and right” manner, considering the rights of both parties. Tex. FaM.Code. AnN. § 7.001 (Vernon 2006). The trial court may generally exercise broad discretion in dividing a marital estate.
Schlueter v. Schlueter,
The party complaining of the trial court’s division of property must demonstrate that the division was so unjust, based on the evidence in the record, that it constitutes an abuse of discretion.
Pletcher v. Goetz,
In considering whether legal or factual sufficiency challenges demonstrate an abuse of discretion, we conduct a two-
Nancy’s petition asserts a claim for reimbursement. No party requested a jury, and the trial court conducted a non-jury trial. During the trial, Nancy claimed that she spent money to enhance Lee’s separate property. Nancy explained that after she married Lee, she received $25,834.11 for selling a house that she owned prior to the marriage. Nancy deposited the proceeds of the sale into Lee’s separate Wells Fargo account. Nancy also testified that she received $4,100.00 from an insurance company for a damage claim on property she owned before she married Lee. After depositing the insurance proceeds into her account, Nancy signed a check made payable to Lee for $4,100.00, which he deposited into his separate Wells Fargo account. Nancy testified that Lee used her separate property funds to reduce a debt he owned on his separate property. Although present during the proceedings, Lee did not testify at trial.
At the conclusion of the trial, the court granted Nancy’s reimbursement request, and subsequently signed a final decree ordering Lee to pay Nancy $29,934.00. The trial court commented that the sum “represents the proceeds from the sale of [Nancy’s] home as well as the insurance settlement on the vehicle.” Within the “Property to Wife” section of the decree, the trial court awarded a “$29,-934.00 money judgment against Lee De-Forrest Bigelow and in favor of Nancy Stephens[.]”
Our analysis of Lee’s issues begins by noting that reimbursement is an equitable remedy.
See Vallone v. Vallone,
Pursuant to section 3.408(b), Lee asserts that Nancy’s reimbursement claim, if any, would be limited to a claim “that her separate marital estate benefit[t]ed either the community estate or [Lee’s] separate marital estate by paying for unsecured debts of the applicable marital estate.” Lee claims that there was no evidence to “either establish the current value of any marital estate at issue or any enhanced value resulting from funds expended by [Nancy].” Essentially, Lee contends that because Nancy’s separate property was used to pay a secured note, her claim would not qualify as a claim under the statutory provisions for reimbursement.
Two intermediate appellate courts have construed section 3.408(b) as the exclusive method that trial courts may utilize in determining whether to award a reim
In
Bishop,
Houston’s Fourteenth Court affirmed a trial court’s denial of a reimbursement claim when a spouse sought reimbursement for the community estate’s payment of part of a loan on the other spouse’s automobile, which was shown to be her separate property.
Bishop,
We disagree that section 3.408(b) necessarily excludes a reimbursement claim that is premised on the payment of a secured debt.
1
In our opinion, “[t]he definition of reimbursement in section 3.408[ (b) ] is simply a non-exhaustive list of two potential reimbursement claims.”
Caro v. Lewis-Caro,
No. 04-07-00759-CV,
A reimbursement claim arises when funds or assets of one estate are used to benefit and enhance another’s separate estate without receiving some benefit.
Vallone,
Because reimbursement is an equitable doctrine, a court of equity must consider all facts and circumstances when determining what is fair, just, and equitable.
Penick v. Penick,
Nancy testified that the proceeds from the sale of her house and the insurance settlement were her separate property. She then explained that these proceeds were directed into Lee’s Wells Fargo account, to which she had no signatory authority or access. Last, she testified that Lee used these proceeds to pay his debt on his separate property. Nancy’s testimony was uncontested. In the absence of any findings, and based on the evidence before it, the trial court could reasonably have concluded the reduction in Lee’s debt increased his net worth. Because reimbursement is an equitable remedy within the discretion of the trial court, we find sufficient evidence exists to support the trial court’s conclusion to award Nancy $29,934.00 on her claim for reimbursement.
See Vallone,
In issue three, Lee argues the trial court erred in awarding Nancy’s reimbursement claim in the form of a money judgment. When a party proves a claim for reimbursement, the Texas Supreme Court has stated that a money judgment is a proper award.
See Jensen v. Jensen,
Attorney’s Fees
In his fourth issue, Lee complains the trial court erred in awarding $6,500.00 in attorney’s fees to Nancy. Lee contends that for a trial court to award attorney’s fees in a divorce action, the fees must “come out of the community property estate and represent an equitable division of the estate of the parties.” According to Lee, “[n]o evidence of community property was presented; no community property exists from which attorney’s fees could be awarded.” We review a trial court’s award of attorney’s fees for an abuse of discretion.
Panozzo v. Panozzo,
While Lee argues that there is no evidence of community property in this case, the divorce decree specifically divides the
Lee does not argue that no basis, statutory or otherwise, exists to support the trial court’s award of attorney’s fees. Lee also did not object to the amount of the fees or to the basis of the fees in the trial court. Nevertheless, even if we were to construe Lee’s complaint to include a claim that the trial court lacked a basis to award the fees, Lee failed to make that objection to the trial court. Therefore, any complaint Lee may have concerning the absence of a statutory basis for the trial court’s award of attorney’s fees was not preserved for review.
See
Tex.R.App. P. 38.1;
Zorilla v. Wahid,
We conclude that Lee failed to show that the trial court abused its discretion in awarding attorney’s fees of $6,500.00. Lee’s fourth issue is overruled. Having overruled all of Lee’s issues, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Although we stated in
Reimert v. Reimert,
that a claim for reimbursement was limited to either the two instances specified in the statute or circumstances not otherwise covered in ‘‘Subchapter E” of the Texas Family Code, our construction of section 3.408 was not necessary to our holding in that case because the majority determined that the spouse seeking economic contribution proved her claim. No. 09-07-418-CV,
