OPINION
George Dale Brown appeals the trial court’s denial of his petition for a post-divorce division of his former wife Teresa’s 401(k) plan and employment performance bonuses she had accrued but not received by the date of the divorce, as well as the court’s post-divorce apportionment of her pension benefits. As the trial court correctly concluded, res judicata bars George’s claims against Teresa’s 401(k) plan and bonuses. The trial court also acted within its discretion in making a just and right division of the pension benefits earned during the marriage. We therefore affirm.
Background
George Dale Brown and Teresa Lynn Payne (formerly Brown) divorced in June 2004. During the marriage, Teresa gained employment with Purdue Pharma, L.P. Her position with the company entitles her to discretionary performance-related bonuses, which she receives on a quarterly basis. The retirement benefits provided to her by Purdue Pharma include both a 401(k) retirement plan and a pension plan. About a year before the divorce, Teresa had taken out a loan through her employer against her 401(k) plan. On the date of divorce, the outstanding loаn amounted to approximately $20,000.
As instructed by the trial court, George and Teresa each submitted an inventory itemizing the community assets and liabilities and proposing their apportionment. The court also considered additional evidence of the community estate. With respect to her bonuses, Teresa testified at the divorce proceeding as follows:
Q: Okay. "While we are on the inventory and discussing money, you are to get a bonus for the fourth quarter of 2003; is that correct?
A: Uh-huh.
Q: Okay. And then you’ve got a bonus that will be accrued possibly for the first quarter of 2004 and you won’t know about that until June; is that correct?
A: That’s correct.
*346 On March 22, 2004, the court ruled on the division of marital estate. The associate judge handling the case prepared a report summarizing the terms of the divоrce and containing a chart dividing the property assets and liabilities between the parties. To construct the chart, the associate judge began with a copy of George’s inventory and proposed property division and then interlineated it when his decisions deviated from George’s proposals. Among the proposals rejected or altered by the cоurt were:
(1) An item entitled “Unaccounted Deposits from Wife’s Earnings for 2002 and 2003” in the approximate amount of $10,000, which the court struck in its entirety;
(2) An item entitled “Wife’s Chase Bank Checking Account” in the amount of $5,811.00, which the court reduced to $1,000, the amount reflected on Teresa’s inventory;
(8) An item entitled “Wife’s Fidelity Investments 401(k) Plan,” in the amount of $160,000, in which George proposed that he and Teresa be awardеd equal shares of $80,000 each. The trial court struck George’s estimated value, inserted the $136,000 estimated value from Teresa’s inventory sheet, struck the proposed award to George and wrote the $136,000 in the chart as an award to Teresa.
The associate judge’s notes also state: “H’s request for language re furnishings, tax related documents, disposition of bonuses and excess 401(k) is dеnied.”
The trial court signed the final divorce decree on June 2, 2004. 1 Neither party sought any postjudgment relief or noticed an appeal from the divorce decree. Thirty-four days later, on July 6, 2004, George petitioned the trial court for a post-divorce division of property, asking that the court apportion and award him funds from (a) Teresa’s pension plan which she allegedly failed to disclose; (b) Teresa’s 401(k) Plan, which, he contended, was worth substantially more than she had represented during the divorce; and (c) bonuses earned by Teresa during the fourth quarter of 2003, which she also allegedly failed to disclose.
The trial court heard evidence in the cause on May 26, 2005 and June 9, 2005. In its July 14, 2005 judgment, the court found that Teresa’s pension plan was not divided at the time of thе parties’ divorce and awarded George 40% of the benefits accrued in that pension plan during the marriage. In addressing George’s remaining challenges concerning Teresa’s employment income and benefits, the trial court ordered Teresa to be “awarded one hundred percent (100%)” and declared that “George Dale Brown is divested of his interest in all sums containеd within Teresa Lynn Brown’s 401 (k) Retirement Plan with Purdue Pharma.” Also, the trial court dismissed with prejudice George’s claim relating to Teresa’s bonuses.
On September 12, 2005, the trial court issued findings of fact and conclusions of *347 law in response to George’s request. Pertinent to this appeal, the court concluded that “[a]ll of Teresa’s interest in the 401(k) Plan was disposed of at the time of trial and no post divоrce division is appropriate.” The trial court also concluded that George’s claims against Teresa’s fourth quarter 2003 and first quarter 2004 employee bonuses were barred by res judica-ta. This appeal followed.
Discussion
The Family Code authorizes a trial court to order the post-divorce division of community property which was not divided in a final divorce decree. See Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 9.201 (Vernon 2006). “Either former spouse may file a suit as provided by this subehapter to divide property not divided or awarded to a spouse in a final decree of divorce or annulment.” Id. § 9.201(a). “If a court of this state failed to dispose of property subject to division in a final decree of divorce or annulment even though the court had jurisdiction over the spouses or оver the property, the court shall divide the property in a manner that the court deems just and right....” Id. § 9.203(a) (Vernon 2006).
The Family Code also allows a court to enter further orders to enforce the division of property; to assist in the implementation of the order; to clarify the order; and to “specify more precisely the manner of effecting the property division previously made,” as long as the substantive division of property is not altered or changed. Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 9.006(a), (b) (Vernon 1998);
Cox v. Carter,
In neithеr endeavor, however, may a trial court “amend, modify, alter, or change the division of property made or approved in the decree of divorce or annulment.” Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 9.007(a) (Vernon 2006). Res judicata applies to a final divorce decree just as it does to any other final judgment, barring subsequent collateral attack even if the divorce decree improperly divided the property.
Baxter v. Ruddle,
Standard of Review
George challenges the legal sufficiency of the facts found by the court as well as the correctness of its legal conclusions that the 401(k) assets and unpaid bonuses had already been addressed in the divorce proceeding. “In an appeal from a bench trial, a trial court’s findings of fact have the same weight as a jury’s verdict.”
HTS Servs., Inc. v. Hallwood Realty Partners, L.P.,
The trial court’s findings of fact are subject to review for legal sufficiency under the same standards applied in reviewing evidence supporting a jury’s answer.
Ortiz v. Jones,
We review a trial court’s conclusions of law dе novo, and will uphold them on appeal if the judgment can be sustained on any legal theory supported by the evidence.
HTS Servs.,
George also complains that the triаl court abused its discretion in its post-divorce division of pension plan assets. “In a post-divorce partition suit, an unequal division should not be disturbed absent a showing that the division was so disproportionate, unjust, and unfair, that it was a clear abuse of discretion.”
Ellis v. Zieben,
No. 01-04-00436-CV,
Res judicata
George challenges the trial court’s legal conclusions that (1) the divorce decree disposed of all of the interest in Teresa’s 401(k) plan and no post-divorce division was appropriate (in other words, the issue could not be relitigated), and (2) res judicata barred George’s petition to divide accrued but unpaid bonuses existing on the date of divorce. Res judicata bars relitigation of claims which have been finally adjudicated or arise out of the same subject matter and could have been litigated in the prior action.
See Martin v. Martin, Martin & Richards, Inc.,
Res judicata bars post-divorce property division actions, however, only when the divorce decree has disposed of the assеt at issue.
Law v. Law,
George suggests that Teresa, as respondent, bore the burden to prove res judicata as an affirmativе defense. We disagree. In contrast to a traditional law
*349
suit in which res judicata is an affirmative defense, as the petitioner in this statutory post-divorce action, George has the burden to prove that the divorce court did not consider or dispose of the 401(k) plan or the accrued bonuses in the final decree.
See
Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 9.201 (suit available only to divide property not divided or awarded in final divorce decree);
see Stephens v. Marlowe,
When a party attacks the legal sufficiency of an adverse finding on an issue on which he has the burden of рroof, he must demonstrate on appeal that the evidence establishes, as a matter of law, all vital facts in support of the issue.
Sterner v. Marathon Oil Co.,
With respect to the 401(k) plan assets, George contends that evidence during the divorce proceeding showed that the 401(k) plan contained a maximum of $136,000, but the plan actually had a balance of at least $177,419.20 two months before the divorce. As a result, he asserts, significant funds in the plan remained unaddressed by the final decree and were subject to post-divorce division. George also complains that the trial court erred in dismissing his claims concerning Teresa’s unpaid bonuses without taking any evidence on the issue.
A trial court may sua sponte take judicial notice of its own records of a former trial in the same case.
See Jones v. Jones,
Further, both of George’s claims concern the trial court’s valuation of community assets before the divorce judgment. The scant evidence of the divorce proceeding in the record shows that the parties contested the value of the 401(k) plan assets, and the court made its determination after considеring the contested evidence. Likewise, with respect to the bonuses earned by Teresa, we presume that the trial court’s record of the divorce proceeding supports a finding that these bonuses were addressed in divorce proceedings. 2
Although George complains that he did not receive sufficient information to arrive at more accurate valuations of these assets during the divorce proceeding, he could have moved to compel production of updated information before entry of the final decree or sought relief through post-judgment proceedings and direct appeal of the judgment. In short, any further challenge to the valuation and disposition of the assets could have occurred in the underlying рroceeding. We find no error in *350 the trial court’s dismissal of these claims on the ground of res judicata.
Award of >¡,01 (k) Plan to Teresa as a Clarification of the Decree
George further asserts that the final decree unambiguously awarded Teresa $136,000, not the entire 401(k) plan, and that the trial court was required to divide the remaining balance in excess of that amount. Accordingly, George contends, the trial court had no authority to modify the original decrеe by awarding Teresa the 401(k) assets in excess of $136,000.
Whether a decree is ambiguous is a question of law.
Shanks,
Contrary to George’s assertion, the plain language of the final decree, which expressly awards Teresa the “401(k) plan in the amount of $136,000,” is subject to more than one reasonable interpretation. The construction urged by George, suggesting that the final decree awarded Teresa a sum certain from the plan, is but one. The trial court adopted the other, concluding that the intent of thе decree was to award Teresa the entire 401(k) plan.
We agree with the construction adopted by the trial court, which comports with the decree as a whole and the circumstances surrounding its formation. First, while the decree contains a section itemizing the community property awarded to George, neither that section nor any part of the decree has language awarding any portion of Teresa’s retirement benefits to George. Second, in the court’s property division notes, which provided the basis for drafting the final decree, the associate judge crossed out George’s proposal that he receive a portion of the 401 (k) plan assets and wrote the entire estimated value of the plan in Teresa's column. These notes reveal an affirmative intent that George not be awarded anything from the plan and that Teresa receive all of it. The trial court correctly exercised its authority to clarify this ambiguous language in order to give effect to the just and right allocation of the community estate that it originally intended. 3
Division of Teresa’s Pension Plan Assets
George also takes issue with the trial court’s decision to award him only 40% of the pension plan assets earned by Teresa during the marriage, complaining that the trial court did not adequately take into consideration Teresa’s failure to disclose those assets in dividing them. A single factor, however, does not require the court to allocate a particular asset in favor of one party or the other. Nothing demonstrates thаt the trial court, in considering all of the relevant facts and cir *351 cumstances, abused its discretion in dividing the pension plan assets as it did.
Conclusion
We conclude that res judicata bars any claim against assets that the trial court divided pursuant to the final decree of divorce. We further conclude that the trial court acted within its discretion in allocating pension plan assets that were not a subject of the divorce decree. We therefore affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Notes
. George maintains that the divorce decree was not final because it did not contain a “Mother Hubbard” clause and did not dispose of all the community assets. The absence of a Mother Hubbard clause, however, does not in itself denote any lack of finality.
See Lehmann v. Har-Con Corp.,
. Accrued but not paid bonuses would not fall into the account until later.
. To the extent George challenges the court’s distribution of the 401(k) assets as an abuse of its discretion to make a just and right allocation of the community estate, we may not consider it here. While this challenge could have been raised in a direct appeal of the final divorce decree, it constitutes an impermissible collateral attack in this proceeding.
See Gainous,
