OPINION
Norma Jean Henry appeals from a trial court judgment granting divorce on the ground of her cruel treatment of her husband, Ian Francis Henry. In three points of error, Norma challenges: (1) the sufficiency of the evidence to support the finding of cruel treatment; (2) the division of the community estate; and (3) the assessment of attorney’s fees against her. We will affirm the parts of the judgment regarding cruel treatment and attorney’s fees (to the extent based on a suit affecting the parent-child relationship), and we will reverse and remand for a new division of the property.
I. Marital History
Ian and Norma were married on June 30,1990. The couple resided in Red Deer, Canada, and Ian worked as a millwright *473 for Nova, where he had worked for the nine previous years. Norma was working part-time as a nurse while going to school to become a registered nurse. The couple’s first child, Aaron, was born on July 14, 1991, and a second son, Dillon, was born on December 28,1992.
In 1994, Ian learned that his employer was downsizing and that he would be eligible for a severance package. The couple then began looking to move. Norma found a job with a hospital in Corpus Christi and moved to Texas in May of 1995. Ian stayed in Canada with the children for nine more weeks in order to sell the house and complete his employment. For the next year, Norma worked the night shift at the hospital, and Ian was unemployed. The first of four marital separations occurred in late December of 1995.
In August 1996, the family moved to League City. Ian began working for Brown and Root, and Norma began working for Vitas. A second marital separation occurred in November 1996 and a third in January 1997. In March 1997, Ian began working a fourteen day on/ fourteen day off schedule for Shell Offshore. A fourth separation began on April 8, 1997, and Ian filed for divorce on April 16.
On January 19, 1998, Ian and Norma entered into a mediated settlement agreement, which purported to resolve all issues relating to the children and the division of property except for the disposition of three accounts and the couple’s vehicles. After a two day trial, the trial court granted divorce on the ground of cruel treatment as pled by Ian. The court also awarded a majority of the three accounts to Ian, granted certain reimbursement claims in his favor, and ordered Norma to pay Ian’s attorney’s fees.
II. Cruel Treatment
Norma first challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the trial court’s finding of cruel treatment. Findings of fact in a bench trial have the same force and dignity as a jury verdict; thus an appellate court reviews sufficiency challenges to findings of fact by the same standards as apply in reviewing a jury’s findings.
Anderson v. City of Seven Points,
Although seldom used since the advent of no-fault divorce, it is still possible for a court to grant a divorce on the ground of cruel treatment.
See
Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 6.002 (Vernon 1998). To constitute cruel treatment, the conduct of the accused party must rise to such a level as to render the couple’s living together insupportable.
Id.; Finn v. Finn,
A. Legal Sufficiency
We first examine the record for the legal sufficiency of the evidence concerning cruel treatment, considering only evidence and inferences that support the finding.
See Minnesota Mining,
Ian testified that each of the four separations was instigated by Norma and that she never told him why she wanted him out of the house; she just told him to go. He attended marriage counseling without her and could only get her to go one time. During the fourth separation, the couple alternated who stayed in the apartment with the children, and Ian testified that Norma abandoned the family for eight days and refused to say where she was staying.
Ian stated that, after he filed for divorce, he got an apartment next door to the one where Norma and the children lived. He said that the lease was about to expire on the old apartment, and Norma invited him over for coffee one night, seduced him, and asked him if she and the children could move in with him. He assented. He then went to work offshore for two weeks, thinking they had reconciled, but when he returned she had moved most of their things out of the new apartment, and she told him she wanted to go through with the divorce.
Ian further testified that, after the divorce was filed, whenever he went to pick up the children for visitation, they were dressed in dirty or torn clothes, and Norma would not give him things for the children that he had requested and she had agreed to give. Also, when he went to pick up his personal property pursuant to the settlement agreement, he found the items sitting in a flower bed, and several things were missing. They arranged to exchange a bookcase, which had been missing from the first exchange, and when he went to pick it up, he found it face down on the road.
Ian’s testimony presented evidence on which the court could have reasonably concluded that Norma’s conduct constituted cruel treatment such that the marriage was made insupportable.
See Merrell Dow,
B. Factual Sufficiency
We now examine the evidence for factual sufficiency, weighing all of the evidence in the record and overturning the finding only if it is so against the great weight and
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preponderance of the evidence as to be clearly wrong and unjust.
See Ortiz,
The vast majority of the evidence regarding cruel treatment in this case comes from the testimony of Ian and Norma. There were no other witnesses called at trial except for the trial attorneys, who principally testified regarding legal fees. The weight to be given the respective testimony of Ian and Norma, therefore, is largely a matter of judging the credibility and demeanor of the witnesses. This court is not permitted to interfere with the fact finder’s resolution of conflicts in the evidence or to pass on the weight or credibility of the witnesses’ testimony.
Sprick v. Sprick,
III. Property Division 1
A trial court’s division of property is not to be disturbed absent a clear abuse of discretion.
Bell v. Bell,
Three bank accounts were at issue before the court: (1) Ian’s Locked-in Registered Retirement Savings Plan (L-RRSP); (2) Ian’s Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP); and (3) the “spousal ac *476 count,” which was in Norma’s name. The trial court found that these three accounts were all established from Ian’s retirement funds. The court also specifically found that the spousal account was not intended as a gift to Norma but was put in her name solely for tax purposes.
The court calculated that the three accounts were worth a total of $101,678.68 (Can.) as of April 21, 1998. This total included certain reimbursements, discussed below, for funds that the court determined to have been advanced to Norma on the eventual distribution of the community assets. The trial court then utilized the
Berry
formula and divided the months that Ian worked for Nova during the marriage (61.2) by the total number of months Ian worked for Nova (171.21).
See Berry v. Berry,
A. The Commuted Retirement
When Ian left Nova, he received the commuted value of his pension plan, $27,397.44 (Can.). He rolled these funds into the L-RRSP, where they stayed until the divorce. The trial court properly applied the Berry formula to these funds. Norma, in fact, applied the same formula to the funds in her distribution proposal to the trial court. These funds are, therefore, not at issue in this appeal.
B. The Severance Package
A “Discretionary Severance” package, amounting to $63,699.09 (Can.), was made available to Ian in 1995, when Nova was “downsizing” its workforce. Ian accepted the package and left the company. Upon receipt, a portion of the funds were deposited in his RRSP account and the spousal account, and a portion was received in cash. The deposited funds remained in the same accounts until the divorce. The trial court determined that all the funds in the accounts were from Ian’s retirement benefits and applied the Berry formula to the total amounts.
Ian testified that the amount of the severance package was based on his years of service to the company, his position, and his performance. The documents submitted from Nova demonstrate that the severance package was an inducement for Ian, and everyone else offered such a package, to leave the company voluntarily. The documents specifically refer to the package as a “payment of 11 months salary” that included compensation for “wages, income, severance pay, termination pay, pay in lieu of notice, expenses, damages and employment benefits.” Ian was required to sign a release of all claims against Nova in order to receive the package.
In
Whorrall v. Whorrall,
To qualify as a “retirement benefit” capable of being apportioned between his separate and the community estate [sic], the payment must be an “earned property right which accrued by reason of years of service,” Busby v. Busby,457 S.W.2d 551 (Tex.1970); or must be a “form of deferred compensation which is earned during each month of service,” Cearley v. Cearley,544 S.W.2d 661 , 665 (Tex.1976).
Whorrall,
In the present case, it is clear from the Nova documents that Ian’s severance package was purely discretionary with the company and was given only to induce his voluntarily leaving his employment and release any related claims he may have had against Nova. Ian’s property right in these funds accrued only once he signed the release of claims. The evidence is legally insufficient to support the trial court’s finding that the severance package was in the nature of a retirement benefit. The application of the
Berry
ratio to the RRSP and spousal accounts funded from the severance package was without proper legal or evidentiary foundation and was, therefore, an abuse of discretion.
See Worford,
C. The Previous Balance
When the funds from the severance package were deposited into the RRSP account, the account already had a balance of $10,399.54 (Can.). Ian testified that the existing funds came from his 1994 salary, placed there in order to receive a tax benefit. He also later testified that perhaps up to $1,000 came from Norma’s income from her part-time job. These funds were, therefore, clearly community property.
See
Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 3.002 (Vernon 1998);
Uranga v. Uranga,
IV. Reimbursement Issues 2
Norma next contends that the trial court erred in granting several of Ian’s reimbursement claims. The law presumes that property possessed by either spouse at the dissolution of the marriage is community property. Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 3.003(a) (Vernon 1998). The presumption may be rebutted and the property shown to be separate property only on clear and convincing evidence.
Id.
at 3.003(b). Reimbursement is an equitable right and its application lies within the broad discretion of the trial court.
Jones v. Jones,
A. Norma’s Student Loan
*478 It is undisputed that Norma entered the marriage with a student loan debt of $8,558 (Can.). Ian testified that he withdrew $4,800 (Can.) from his RRSP, which he had prior to the marriage, for partial payment of the student loan. He also testified that money to pay the loan may have come from Norma’s part-time job. Norma admitted during her testimony that the debt was paid during the marriage, but she did not address the question of where the money came from to pay the debt.
The trial court awarded Ian reimbursement for the full amount of the student loan, $8,558 (Can.). The evidence, however, supports, at most, a reimbursement from Norma’s separate property to Ian’s separate property of $4,800 (Can.), the amount Ian testified that he spent of his separate funds.
See Pearce v. Pearce,
B. $1,500 Withdrawal
It is also undisputed that Norma withdrew $1,500 (U.S.) from a community savings account. The trial court ordered reimbursement from Norma’s separate estate to the community estate for the full amount, with Ian then receiving half, or $750.
Norma testified that she spent the money for the welfare of the children. Generally, there is no right to reimbursement for costs of living.
See Norris v. Vaughan,
Furthermore, it is undisputed that the withdrawal occurred on April 8, 1997, and that it was from a joint account. The temporary restraining order in this case was not signed until April 16, 1997. There is no evidence that Norma was under any prohibition against withdrawing funds from a joint account at the time of the withdrawal .
3
See generally Davis v. Davis,
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C. Closeout of Cash Account
It is undisputed that Ian wrote a check to Norma for $5,080 (U.S.) in April 1997. The check was written after Ian closed the “cash account” that was in his name. Ian testified that when he closed the cash account, he gave half of the proceeds to Norma and kept half for himself. He also stated that the funds in the cash account came from the reimbursement of his purchase of a vehicle that was part of an “entrepreneurial package” that he was eligible for upon his leaving the employ of Nova. The trial court found that these funds were in the form of an advance on the retirement accounts. The trial court then awarded an offset for the full amount of this transaction, or $7,125.78 (Can.).
The entrepreneurial package was a program under which employees of Nova could obtain funds in order to start their own independent contracting businesses. According to Ian, in order to be eligible for the package, he had to: (1) have three years employment with the company, and (2) complete a detailed business plan for the consulting business. It also appears that the entrepreneurial package only made one eligible for reimbursement of expenses already made in setting up the company.
In order to be considered a retirement benefit, this entrepreneurial package must have been an earned property right, which accrued by reason of years of service, or must be a form of deferred compensation, which was earned during each month of service.
See Whorrall,
In
In re Joiner,
In the present case, the entrepreneurial package was even further removed from any accrued right in benefits, because, after becoming eligible for the opportunity, Ian still had to complete and have approved a detailed business plan, and he had to make and prove expenditures that were only then reimbursed by Nova. Ian’s rights in the funds of the entrepreneurial package did not accrue until he completed the plan, had it approved, and submitted legitimate invoices. He did each of these
*480
during the marriage. The money from the entrepreneurial fund was not a retirement benefit.
See id.
at 498. It was community property.
See
Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 3.003(a)(Vernon 1998);
Uranga,
Ian testified that when he cashed in the account, he kept half of the money and gave the other half to Norma. Norma testified that she used the funds for living expenses for herself and the children.
See generally Norris,
D. “Separation Related Loan”
It is likewise undisputed that Ian wrote a check to Norma on April 15, 1997, for $1,000 (U.S.). In its conclusions of law, the trial court called this transfer of funds “an advance ... on division of community property.” The court then granted an “offset” of this amount to Ian.
In the “memo” blank of the check is a handwritten notation by Ian: “Separation related loan.” Ian also testified that these funds were an “advance,” and his proposed division of property called them an “advance” as well. In her testimony, Norma admitted receiving the check in question and did not refute that the funds were an advance or a “separation loan” from Ian to her.
Although the evidence regarding the nature of this transaction is far from overwhelming, it is sufficient to support the trial court’s use of its discretion in finding it was an advance on the community estate.
V. Attorney’s Pees
Norma next contends that the trial court abused its discretion in assessing Ian’s attorney’s fees of $18,350 against her. She specifically argues that: (1) the award could not have been made pursuant to the statutory authority for such awards in suits affecting the parent-child relationship because all issues regarding the children in this case were settled in mediation; (2) the award of fees cannot be construed as a just and right division of the community estate; and (3) there was no evidence that Ian had any obligation to his attorney to pay the fees.
A trial court may award attorney’s fees in a suit affecting the parent-child relationship. Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 106.002 (Vernon Supp.2000). A court may also apportion attorney’s fees in a divorce action as part of a just and right division of property.
Capellen v. Capellen,
In the present case, the trial court’s judgment states that Ian’s attorney’s fees were “necessary as support for [Ian] and the children.” Although the use of the term “support” in this context is confusing, it appears that the court may have award *481 ed fees under both sources of authority, as part of the division of property and in relation to the suit affecting the parent-child relationship. The court did not segregate which fees were awarded under each grant of authority. 4
Norma contends that the award was not a just and right division of the property. She also contends that the fact that the parties settled all issues relating to the children precluded the court from making an award of attorney’s fees on a suit affecting the parent-child relationship. Although these are interesting issues, they were never raised in the trial court. In order to preserve certain complaints regarding an award of attorney’s fees, a party must make a timely and sufficiently specific objection to such an award in the trial court.
See
Tex.R.App. P. 33.1;
Massey v. Massey,
Norma additionally contends that there was no evidence establishing that Ian was obligated to pay the fees. The record, however, contains the testimony of Ian’s trial counsel, Douglas Foster, who stated that Norma’s conduct put Ian in the position of having to incur attorney’s fees in the amount requested. He further testified regarding the reasonableness of the fees, the hours worked, the rate charged, and the services provided. Ian testified that he had expended $18,350 in attorney’s fees up to a certain point in the trial and that he still owed a great deal of the fees. This is sufficient evidence on which the court could have determined that Ian was obligated to pay the fees.
See Parker v. Parker,
Accordingly, the trial court’s award of attorney’s fees is affirmed to the extent it is based on the suit affecting the parent-child relationship. However, to the extent the fees were awarded as part of the division of the property, the trial court should reexamine the award on remand as a part of making a just and right division of the property.
See In re Joiner,
VI. Conclusion
As detailed above, we affirm the portions of the judgment wherein the trial court granted divorce on the ground of cruel treatment and awarded attorney’s fees (to the extent that they were based on the suit affecting the parent-child relation
*482
ship). We further find that the trial court abused its discretion in the characterization and division of the marital estate. When reversible error is committed that materially affects the trial court’s just and right division of property, a court of appeals is not permitted to either render a different division or to remand only certain portions of the marital property for a new division; rather, it must remand the entire community estate for a new division.
Jacobs,
Notes
. The funds subject to characterization and division were in Canadian dollars in Canadian accounts. Several of the reimbursement claims, along with the award of costs and attorney’s fees, were in U .S. dollars. For clarity, sums in this opinion will be calculated in Canadian dollars (unless otherwise indicated), using the same exchange rate determined and utilized by the trial court.
. It is interesting to note that although the settlement agreement purported to settle, waive, and release all claims between the parties except in regard to distribution of the retirement accounts and the vehicles, the parties went on to litigate several claims for reimbursement that involved funds that had never been in the retirement accounts. The trial court then ruled on these reimbursement claims despite having approved the settlement agreement. Several of these claims were decided in Ian’s favor and several in Norma’s. Neither party objected to the consideration of these issues in the trial court and neither party raises the subject on appeal; it will, therefore, have no impact on our consideration of the reimbursement issues. Additionally, since Ian does not complain on appeal of any of the issues on which he lost in the trial court, we will only consider the issues on which Ian won.
. In his brief, Ian erroneously maintains that the temporary orders were in place at the time of this withdrawal. The temporary orders were signed on May 7, 1997, but the withdrawal occurred, according to both sides’ briefs and Ian's own testimony, on April 8, 1997. Furthermore, both the temporary orders and the initial temporary restraining order (signed April 16) contained provisions allowing the parties to make expenditures for reasonable attorney's fees and reasonable living expenses.
. Although there was some evidence linking the expenditure of attorney’s fees with the issues relating to the children, there was more substantial evidence suggesting that most of the fees were incurred as a result of disagreements over property. Ian's counsel testified that Norma's monetary demands escalated the fees, and, it should be noted, all issues concerning the children were settled well before trial.
. Appellant did not make these arguments in a motion for new trial or a motion to modify the judgment. Nor did she object when the Appellee put on his evidence regarding the amount of attorney’s fees or when he presented evidence connecting some of the fees to issues involving the children.
