OPINION
This is a purported appeal from a judgment rendered in a Bill of Review proceeding filed by the appellant, Ethel M. Kessler, in connection with her prior divorce suit against the appellee, Robert A. Kessler. The first issues to be decided are whether the remedy of a bill of review was available to appellant, and, if so, was the judgment rendered in the bill of review proceeding a final judgment.
The original suit for divorce, child custody and division of community property was filed on February 9, 1982, in the 214th District Court of Nueces County, Texas, and was docketed as Cause No. 82-640-F. A consent judgment was signed by the trial judge on June 29, 1982, whiсh granted a divorce to the parties, made proper provision for the custody and support of the youngest child born to said marriage, and divided the community property of the parties in accordance with an agreed property settlement.
There is no question but that the judgment rendered in the original divorce proceedings (Cause No. 82-640-F) was separate and divisible. In
Missouri-Kansas-Texas, R. Co. of Texas v. Pluto,
A court having power to vaсate a judgment entirely may grant less relief by vacating it in part only, where justice so requires. Where only a portion of the judgment is separable from the balance thereof, and the objection goes only to a separable part, the court should not set aside the whole judgment but only the objectionable part.
Therefore, the judgment rendered in the original divorce action is now final with respect to the divorce granted and to the custodial provisions therein contained. Those issues were not before the trial court in the Bill of Review.
See McFarland v. Reynolds,
Appellant, in her verified petition for Bill of Rеview, alleged facts which, if true, showed that she was prevented from asserting her right to a greater share of the community property accumulated by the parties during the marriage because of the extrinsic fraud perpetrated on her by appel-lee in securing her consent to the originаl property division. She also alleged that appellee had misrepresented the values of some of the property in the inventory filed by him in the divorce action. She further alleged that the failure to discover the fraud until more than 30 days after the rendition of the judgment was not due to lack of diligence on her part. She sought a new trial on the community property division, plus an award of attorney’s fees incurred in connection with her prosecution of the Bill of Review.
On August 22, 1984, the trial judge, in a trial to the court, rendered a judgment in Cause No. 83-6282-F, which, in words and figures, reads as follows:
FINAL JUDGMENT
Hearingá were held in this causе on April 19, 1984 and July 18, 1984. Both Petitioner and Respondent appeared in person and by their attorneys of record and announced ready for trial.
The Court having considered the evidence presented and the argument of counsel is of the opinion that Petitioner should be awarded $6,233.13.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that the Respondent, ROBERT A. KESSLER pay Petitioner, ETHEL M. KESSLER the sum of $6,233.13 together with 9% interest from the date the parties were divorced on June 29, 1982.
Respondent is further awarded the sum of $3,000.00 as attorney’s fees incurred in this cause which amount shall bear interest at the rate of 9% per annum from the date of this Judgment.
The costs of this proceeding arе taxed against the Respondent. All other relief not herein granted is denied.
SIGNED this 22nd day of August 1984.
MIKE WESTERGREN, Judge Presiding
Appellant contends that the trial court erred in failing 1) to set aside the agreed property settlement, 2) to vacate the prior judgment, and 3) to render a substitute judgment for the prior judgment which fairly divided the community property between the parties. Appellee contends: 1) that appellant is not entitled to any relief in this case because she pursued the wrong
A property settlement, reached by and between the parties in a divorce action, and an agreed judgment, which is rendered which incorporated such an agreement therein, are subject to being set aside in a bill of review proceeding because of extrinsic fraud.
McMurry v. McMurry,
Under the allegations of fact set out in appellant’s petition, the remedy by a bill of review was available to appellant. The petition was timely filed.
Appellee admitted that, prior to his filing of an Inventory of the community property, he deposited $8,310.84 (community funds) in the Southern National Bank in the name of another person. He also admitted that he intentionally omitted the above deposit from the Inventory filed by him in the divorce action.
Appellant testified that, at the time the agreed property settlement was made, she was not aware thаt appellee had deposited $8,310.84 in the Southern National Bank and that she did not learn of such deposit until six or seven months after the divorce decree became final. She also testified that she would not have agreed to the property settlement if she had known at the time that appеllee had secreted money in a bank.
Appellant’s acceptance of the community property disposition made in the original judgment does not, as a matter of law, estop her from a review of that disposition since she alleged that she was led into the agreement through fraud and misrеpresentation on the part of appellee, through no fault or negligence by her.
McFarland,
supra, at 625.
See Ragsdale v. Ragsdale,
Appellant was not limited to a partition suit to recover her just portion of property that was not divided in the decree of divorce under the rule of
Busby v. Busby,
The next question to be answered in this case is whethеr the judgment rendered in the Bill of Review proceeding is a final judgment from which an appeal will lie. We answer that question in the negative.
The final judgment in a bill of review action should either 1) deny any relief to the petitioner or 2) grant the bill of review and set aside the former judgment, insofar as it is attacked, and substitute therefor a new judgment which properly adjudicates the entire controversy.
Texas Employers’ Ins. Ass’n v. Arnold,
It is a well-established rule of law in this state that, when a judgment rendered in a bill of review proceedings does not dispose of the entire controversy, it is not a final judgment from which an appeal will lie.
Henderson v. Shell Oil Co.,
The rules, requirements, and procedures applicable to a bill of review were laid down by the Texas Supreme Court in
Alexander v. Hagedorn,
In a bill of review proceeding, in order to invoke the equitable powers of the court, the complainant must, by verified petition, allege factually that the prior judgment was rendered as a result of fraud, accident, or mistake, unmixed with the complainant’s own negligence.
If a prima facie meritorious case has been shown by the petition for a bill of review, the court will then conduct a new trial on the issues raised by the pleadings in the bill of review action. This trial may, in the discretion of the trial court, be conducted in one hearing or in separate hearings.
Baker v. Goldsmith,
Here, a trial before the court was held on July 18, 1984. The evidence shows conclusively that appellee, in the original trial, fraudulently concealed a cash deposit, which constituted community property, in the amount of $8,310.84. It was also proved conclusivеly at the hearing on the petition for Bill of Review that the prior judgment was not rendered as a result of any fault or negligence on the part of appellant. It was further established beyond question that appellant did not learn of this fraud until the time for prosecuting an appeal, either by direct appeal from the original judgment or by writ of error, had expired.
The judgment in the original divorce action was not introduced in evidence at the hearing on the Bill of Review and no evidence as to the community property of the parties was presented to the trial court at that hearing.
Evidently, thе trial judge was of the opinion that the judgment in the bill of review action would be supplementary to the original judgment, and that the two judgments would be sufficient to equitably divide
all
of the community property acquired by the parties. That cannot be done. There is no law which permits a final judgment in an original procеeding to be supplemented by a subsequent judgment in a bill of review proceeding. To do so would run afoul of Rule 301, TEX.R. CIV.P., and the holdings by the Texas Supreme Court, that there can only be one final judgment in a bill of review proceeding, which
must
set aside the prior judgment and
must
render a substitute judgment for the former judgment which adjudicates the entire controvеrsy between the parties.
See Bridgman v. Moore,
Appellee, in his brief, argues that, under the holding of
Jones v. Jones,
The Jones case is distinguishable from this case. In Jones, while the opening paragraph and certain language in the opinion indicate that the appeal is from a judgment rendered in a bill of review proceeding only, a reading of the case shows that two suits were filed by James Jones, one being a bill of review and the other being a partition suit. In the bill of review action, he sought to set aside the original property settlement on the ground that Dora Guillen Jones, his ex-wife, had fraudulently concealed community funds in excess of $35,000.00. In the suit for partition, he alleged that the divorce decree failed to dispose of community funds of more than $35,000.00, which his ex-wife had fraudulently conсealed from him, and that they were, therefore, tenants in common of these funds, which should be partitioned. By agreement of the parties, both suits were consolidated for trial. Judgment was rendered whereby James Jones was awarded $18,000.00. The division of the community property made in the original decree оf divorce was not disturbed. The judgment of the trial court in Jones can be sustained only on the theory that it was authorized by the suit for partition of community property that was not divided by the original decree. In that respect, it is distinguished from the case at bar. We do not consider Jones to be controlling here.
What we wish to here reiterate is that, in a bill of review procеeding, a judgment which is merely supplementary to the former judgment without setting aside the prior judgment and rendering a final judgment on the merits of the controversy is a nullity, and leaves the former judgment “standing undisturbed.”
Hermann Hospital Estate v. Nachant,
Appellant, in her petition for a Bill of Review, in pertinent part, stated:
Plaintiff requests that the Court set aside and cаncel the settlement agreement signed by the Plaintiff and Defendant for the reasons set forth above; that the Court set aside judgment rendered on the 29th day of June 1982, which incorporated the terms of the property settlement agreement; and that the Court order division of the estate of the parties in a manner that the Court deems just and right....
The judgment in question did not expressly set aside either the property settlement agreement or the former judgment insofar as it divided the community property of the parties. Such former judgment cannot be set aside in a bill of review proceeding by implication. The judgment is nothing mоre than a personal judgment against appellee for the recovery of money. It did not settle the entire controversy (a proper division of community property) between the parties.
An examination of the statement of facts, the comments made by the trial judge during the hearing on the Bill of Review, and the recitations in the judgment shows that the only issues intended by the trial court to be resolved were whether 1) appellee fraudulently concealed community assets, and, if so, how much of the concealed assets should be awarded appellant, and 2) whether appellee hаd misrepresented the values of certain properties in the
In view of our disposition of this purported appeal, it is not necessary that we dispose of appellee’s crosspoints. We express no opinion as to the merits on the issues so raised.
Appeal dismissed without prejudice.
