In this dispute over the division of property in a divorce decree, we must decide whether the trial court impermissibly reclassified an asset originally divided in a 1981 divorce decree. For the reasons expressed below, we hold that it did.
Rita Lackey Fillingim Pearson (Rita) and Willis Dan Fillingim (Dan) married on August 1, 1970. During the marriage, Dan’s parents conveyed to Dan four deeds for mineral rights, which Dan and Rita jointly leased to third parties. Dan and Rita divorced on June 9,1981.
The divorce decree states that “the estate of the parties be divided as follows” and divides property in the community estate into two schedules, one for Rita and one for Dan. The decree does not specifically mention the mineral rights that originally belonged to Dan’s parents in its division, but does include residuary clauses in each schedule awarding both parties a “one-half interest in all other property or assets not otherwise disposed of or divided herein.” Although there is no dispute that Dan was properly served in connection with the divorce proceedings, Dan neither appeared at the final divorce decree hearing nor hired an attorney to represent him at any point in the divorce proceedings. Dan has not made any other collateral attacks on the validity of the 1981 judgment. After the divorce, both Rita and Dan received royalties from the mineral rights.
At trial, Dan claimed that he assumed the royalties he was receiving amounted to 100% of the royalties, and that he did not find out that Rita was receiving royalties until March 2002. In April 2006, nearly twenty-five years after the divorce was entered, Dan filed a petition in the original divorce cause to clarify the decree with respect to the mineral rights he alleged were gifts to him from his parents during the marriage. Dan also filed a separate suit for declaratory judgment that the four mineral rights deeds were his separate property at the time of divorce. The trial court consolidated these two matters. Dan requested that the trial court clarify that the mineral rights were his separate property, as they were gifts from his parents and not divided by the divorce decree. 1 After hearing testimony from both parties and admitting the deeds into evidence, the trial court determined that the deeds were gifts from Dan’s parents and thus Dan’s separate property, and that the divorce decree did not partition the separate property of the parties. Judgment was entered, and Rita appealed.
The court of appeals initially reversed and rendered judgment for Rita. However, on rehearing, the court of appeals reasoned that the clause “the estate of the parties” from the original divorce decree only included community property.
We must decide whether the trial court had jurisdiction to “clarify” the decree through Dan’s suit and whether the mineral leases in question were included in the 1981 decree. Under the Family Code, the court that renders a divorce decree retains jurisdiction to clarify and enforce the property division within that decree. Tex. Fam.Code §§ 9.002, .008. If a decree is ambiguous, that court can enter a clarification order.
Id.
at §§ 9.006, .008. However, it is beyond the power of the court to “amend, modify, alter, or change the division of property made or approved in the decree of divorce or annulment.”
Id.
at § 9.007(a). A judgment finalizing a divorce and dividing marital property bars relitigation of the property division, even if the decree incorrectly characterizes or divides the property.
Reiss v. Reiss,
“[T]he estate of the parties” was to be divided as stated in the divorce decree’s two schedules. Trial courts can only divide community property, and the phrase “estate of the parties” encompasses the community property of a marriage, but does not reach separate property.
Eggemeyer v. Eggemeyer,
The issue, then, is whether the mineral rights were characterized as community property at the time of the 1981 divorce decree. Dan claims the mineral rights were a gift from his parents. The Family Code provides that gifts to a spouse during marriage are that spouse’s separate property. Tex. Fam.Code § 3.001. However, section 3.003 also codified the common-law proposition that “[pjroperty possessed by either spouse during or on dissolution of marriage is presumed to be community property.”
Id.
§ 3.003(a);
Tarver v. Tarver,
The divorce decree did not specifically divide the mineral deeds, but the schedules included residuary clauses that awarded each party “[a] one-half interest in all other property or assets not otherwise disposed of or divided herein.” Such residuary clauses, as opposed to more limited clauses that divide only the property “in possession” of the former spouses, have been held to effectively divide property not explicitly mentioned in the decree.
See Buys v. Buys,
Certainly, a court cannot divest an owner of separate property.
Eggemeyer,
A final, unambiguous divorce decree that disposes of all marital property bars relitigation.
Shanks v. Treadway,
The trial court lacked jurisdiction to alter the original divorce decree, and the court of appeals erred in affirming the trial court’s declaration that the deeds were Dan’s separate property. Accordingly, and without hearing oral argument, Tex. R.App. P. 59.1, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and render judgment dismissing Dan’s claims for want of jurisdiction.
Notes
. Rita counterclaimed for unpaid child support, attorneys fees and costs. Dan filed a plea to the jurisdiction to dismiss Rita’s claim, as over ten years had passed since their youngest child turned 18. The trial court granted his plea to the jurisdiction, and Rita’s counterclaims are not before us.
