OPINION
Appellant, F.M.G.W., appeals from the portion of a divorce judgment, decreed on November 29, 2010, and signed on May 5, 2011, which divides the community estate. The divorce decree, in part, awarded Appellant a 2005 Lexus motor vehicle, and ordered D.S.W., Appellee, to pay the balance due on the promissory note given as part of the purchase price of the Lexus. In her appeal, Appellant seeks, in part, a new trial and reversal of the portion of the judgment dividing the community estate but does not seek reversal of those portions of the judgment granting the divorce or relating to the parent-child relationship with their now-adult child.
During the pendency of her appeal from the divorce judgment, Appellant filed in justice court an action against Appellee for $10,000 in damages supported by a verified petition in which she accused Appellee, in part, of “selling me my Lexus, which I was awarded in our divorce Nov. 29, 2010,” and failing “to pay [for the] car ... after he submitted [the] sale.” In her justice court petition, Appellant sought $10,000 for Ap-pellee’s alleged failure to pay off the car “after he submitted sale,” for her inability to work due to the expiration of the vehicle’s registration and having “no use of vehicle,” for “penalties incurred due to false sale,” and as damages for “repairs needed due to vehicle being parked [for] 9 months.”
Appellee now seeks dismissal of Appellant’s appeal, arguing the appeal is
Two narrow exceptions permit an appellant to avoid the acceptance-of-benefits doctrine. Richards v. Richards,
In his motion, Appellee contends that Appellant, by filing suit against him in justice court for $10,000 in damages arising from the Lexus which the trial court awarded to her, has accepted the benefits of the property division by seeking enforcement thereof in justice court while also challenging the validity of the property division on appeal, and is treating the trial court’s divorce decree as “both right and wrong.”
In her response, Appellant contends that her justice court suit against Appellee “did not actually attempt to enforce any provision of the judgment, but essentially sought damages for what was alleged to be a fraudulent attempt to transfer the vehicle to her by claiming [Appellee] had sold [the vehicle] to her and for damage done to the vehicle by Appellee’s failure to properly maintain the vehicle while it was in his possession.” Appellant admits in her supporting affidavit that she filed the justice suit against Appellee “to get money to fix the Lexus and be able to register it and have it inspected.” Appellant has since
Appellant argues that the aeceptance-of-benefits doctrine does not apply under these facts because her filing of the justice suit was due to economic necessity. Appellant asserts that title remains in Ap-pellee’s name and that conveyance to Ap-pellee will not be difficult if the case is remanded to the trial court after appeal.
In support of these contentions, Appellant has provided an affidavit which contains explanations of her financial need to use a vehicle for work as a realtor, an admission that she has both used the Lexus for work and has also borrowed other vehicles from family and friends, and her assertion that she has attempted to avoid accepting the benefits of the trial court’s judgment. Appellant also contends in her affidavit that she could not use the Lexus because the vehicle’s registration and inspection stickers were expired.
The vehicle registration renewal form affixed as an exhibit to Appellant’s affidavit shows the 2011 registration fee for the Lexus was $52.80. The affidavit also included an automobile service invoice bearing Appellant’s name and reflecting that a diagnostic service was performed on the Lexus at a cost of $89. The invoice, dated September 21, 2012, recommends a variety of service recommendations on the Lexus due to “lot rot,” and notes that the “car has been neglected.” These recommendations for the 2005 Lexus include battery service, tire rotation, air filter, a tune-up, fuel injection service, oil change, a second air filter, transmission service, cooling-system service, timing belt, water-pump service, brake-fluid flush, four-wheel alignment, air-conditioner service, throttle bore cleaning, two serpentine belts, and a “p/s flush,” at a combined price of $1,918.50. The invoice also notes that the vehicle is in need of new tires but fails to quote a price therefor.
Contrary to her response to the motion to dismiss, in which she states the title to the Lexus remains in Appellee’s name, Appellant acknowledges in her affidavit that Appellee transferred title to the Lexus to her in September 2012. Lacking specificity or supporting evidence or both, Appellant asserts in her affidavit that: (1) she has divorce-related expenses beyond her income and other expenses; (2) has legal fees related to the trial and appeal of this case; (3) has borrowed $80,000 from a sibling to whom she is reimbursing $300 to $400 per month; (4) has incurred expenses when she and her child moved out of the marital residence; (5) has incurred expenses to become a licensed realtor; (6) has borrowed an unspecified sum from another sibling; (7) was hired by one of her siblings to renovate the sibling’s home; and (8) spent $200 to repair and render functional a minivan given to Appellant by her parents.
In his reply, Appellee argues that no economic necessity exists for Appellant to file a separate suit for $10,000 in damages purportedly caused by his alleged failure to comply with the divorce judgment. Ap-pellee asserts that Appellant’s filing of the verified justice court petition constituted an acceptance of the benefits of the divorce judgment and deprived this Court of jurisdiction, which was not revived by Appellant’s nonsuit of the justice court action. Appellee, therefore, asks that we dismiss Appellant’s appeal for want of jurisdiction.
Although only partially recited here, we have considered the entirety of Appellee’s and Appellant’s filings and arguments regarding the alleged applicability and inapplicability of the acceptance-of-benefits doctrine and the exceptions
Appellant has failed to adequately demonstrate that she accepted the benefit of the trial court’s judgment out of financial duress. See Richards,
The acceptance-of-the-benefits doctrine is a jurisdictional rule grounded on the constitutional authority of courts. Harlow Land Co., Ltd.,
Appellant’s conduct deprived this Court of jurisdiction which cannot be recreated through her subsequent nonsuit of the justice action. See Harlow Land Co., Ltd.,
McCLURE, C.J., not participating.
