OPINION
Stace Carol LeGrand-Brock appeals the property division in a divorce decree. She challenges the trial court’s characterization of $6,975,510 as Roy Richard Brock’s separate property. Finding no reversible error, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Stace and Roy were married on January 10, 1999. Roy obtained 740.5 shares of separate property stock in BTH Holdings, Inc. before his marriage to Stace. On February 15, 1999, BTH’s board of directors, with the unanimous consent of the stockholders, passed a resolution to dissolve BTH, liquidate its assets, and distribute the assets pursuant to a plan of liquidation. The plan of liquidation required the officers of the corporation to pay all of BTH’s current outstanding liabilities, debts, and obligations. All remaining corporate assets would then be distributed pro rata to the shareholders in complete cancellation or redemption of all the shares of capital stock. BTH distributed to Roy the following cash distributions: $4,443,000 on March 5, 1999; $1,406,950 on September 10, 1999; $444,300 on November 5, 1999; and $681,260 on November 23, 2001. 1 A certificate of dissolution was issued on October 31, 2001.
Stace filed for divorce on October 10, 2002. The trial court granted the divorce, and awarded the $6,975,510 in cash distributions to Roy as his separate property. Stace appealed. The Supreme Court transferred the appeal to the Tenth Court of Appeals pursuant to a docket equalization order. In that appeal, Stace argued the trial court erred in refusing to allow her to present expert testimony regarding the characterization of the cash distributions.
LeGrand-Brock v. Brock,
No. 10-04-00251-CV,
On remand, the trial court heard testimony from Stace’s accounting expert regarding the characterization of the cash distributions. The accountant testified the cash distributions were paid from retained earnings, were liquidating dividends, and should be characterized as community property. The trial court found that the distributions were not dividends. The court ruled that Roy had received liquidating distributions pursuant to the dissolution of BTH, and the distributions were in redemption or cancellation of his separate property stock. The property division in the divorce decree remained the same.
Stace brings five appellate issues attacking the court’s characterization of the distributions. In issue one, Stace argues the trial court erred in determining the distri- *321 buttons were separate property because Roy failed to present evidence to overcome the community property presumption. In issue two, Stace argues the trial court’s mischaracterization of the cash distributions resulted in an inequitable property division. In issue three, she asserts there is no evidence to support the trial court’s finding that the cash distributions were in cancellation or redemption of Roy’s separate property stock. In her fourth issue, Stace argues there is no evidence to support the trial court’s finding that the cash distributions were not dividends. In issue five, she asserts there is no evidence to support the trial court’s conclusion that the distributions were Roy’s separate property and were distributed in cancellation and redemption of his separate-property stock. She argues the issues together as a challenge to the characterization of the distributions, and we address the issues together.
BTH was a Delaware corporation. Under Delaware law, a dissolving corporation must first pay its creditors, and then distribute the remaining assets to the stockholders. See Del.Code ANN. tit. 8, §§ 280, 281 (2007); see generally Tex. Bus. Corp. Act. Ann. art. 6.04 (Vernon Supp.2007) (distribution under Texas law). 2 The corporation survives for three years after dissolution to settle and close the business, to dispose of and convey property, to discharge liabilities and to distribute to the stockholders any remaining assets, but not for the purpose of continuing the business for which it was organized. Del.Code Ann. tit. 8, § 278 (2007); see Tex. Bus. Corp. Act. Ann. art. 7.12 (Vernon 2003) (limited survival after dissolution).
Under the Texas Family Code, property owned before marriage is separate property. Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 3.001(1) (Vernon 2006). The parties stipulated the stock was Roy’s separate property. Generally, when a spouse owns separate-property stock in a dissolving corporation and receives distributions of liquidated assets, the distributions remain the stockholder’s separate property.
See Fuhrman v. Fuhrman,
Stace argues that because BTH distributed the cash from its retained earnings, the distributions were dividends and therefore community property. In her view, the distributions were essentially income generated from Roy’s separate-property stock and must be characterized as community property. Her expert wit *322 ness labeled the cash distributions as “liquidating dividends.” 3
Cash dividends from stock are treated like income, and when distributed during marriage are community property.
Bakken v. Bakken,
It is undisputed the distributions here were properly made pursuant to a corporate dissolution. Stace makes no allegation of fraud on the community estate. She makes no effort to pierce the corporate veil.
See, e.g., Boyo v. Boyo,
A liquidating distribution includes a transfer of money by a corporation to its shareholders in liquidation of all or a portion of its assets.
See
Black Law’s DICTIONARY 508 (8th ed. 2004) (A “liquidating distribution” is “[a] distribution of trade or business assets by a dissolving corporation or partnership.”);
see also
Tex. Bus. CoRP. Act. Ann. art. 1.02(A)(13)(c) (Vernon Supp.2007) (“ ‘Distribution’ means a transfer of money ... by a corporation to its shareholders ... in liquidation of all or a portion of its assets.”). The board resolution required BTH to distribute its remaining assets to its shareholders “in complete cancellation or redemption of all the shares of capital stock of the Company[.]” It is immaterial to the characterization of the property in this case that the assets distributed on dissolution were the corporation’s retained earnings. Upon the dissolution of the corporation, Roy received distributions of $6,975,510 in exchange for his separate property stock. The cash distributions represented an exchange of Roy’s separate property stock for BTH’s cash assets.
5
See generally
*323
Harris,
Stace argued to the trial court that the Tenth Court of Appeals remanded the case so the trial court could listen to her expert’s testimony regarding characterization and tracing.
6
Stace argues in this Court that because Roy did not present characterization evidence on remand, Roy failed to rebut the community property presumption. Stace quotes from the Tenth Court of Appeals’s opinion, which stated, “It is unclear from the record how many shares, if any, were relinquished in connection with each cash payment.”
Le-Gran&-Brock,
The Tenth Court of Appeals’s opinion also noted, however, that the board of directors passed a resolution to dissolve BTH on February 15, 1999, and that BTH received a certificate of dissolution on October 81, 2001 from the State of Delaware. Id. Stace’s expert testified:
Once the dissolution was passed the shares were to be cancelled. They could not have been transferred once they were cancelled.... It doesn’t matter whether the shareholders turn in their stock certificates for cancellation or they are just assumed cancelled. The payout of all retained earnings and profits renders them worthless and the corporation files its termination with the State as was done here.
She testified, “There was ultimate cancellation of the stock ... when all matters were done[,]” and although she had no knowledge as to whether the stock was cancelled, “[tjhere should have been[]” and although she had “not seen them,” she was “sure there probably was.”
BTH was dissolved. The controlling facts in this case were not controverted by Stace’s expert on remand, but were in material respect conceded. The number of shares exchanged for each liquidating distribution is not determinative. As Stace’s expert testified, the stock was ultimately rendered worthless by the dissolution. Roy’s separate-property stock ownership included the right to share in the distribution of the corporation’s assets on dissolution. See Mischer v. Burke, 456 5.W.2d 550, 554-55 (Tex.Civ.App.-Houston [1st Dist.] 1970, writ ref d n.r.e.).
The characterization of the distributions based on the uncontroverted evidence was a matter of law for the court to decide.
See, e.g., Pace v. Pace,
The trial court properly characterized the liquidating distributions as Roy’s separate property. Stace’s issues are overruled. The trial court’s judgment is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. As part of the plan of liquidation, Roy also received 740.5 shares of stock in BTH Property Services, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary ct BTH Holdings. The parties stipulated that this stock was Roy’s separate property.
. With regard to the distribution of assets, the current statutes cited contain no substantive changes from those applicable in 1999.
.A "liquidation dividend” is defined as "[a] dividend paid to a dissolving corporation's shareholders, [usually] from the capital of the corporation, upon the decision to suspend all or part of its business operations.” Black Law’s Dictionary 513 (8th ed.2004).
. However, stock received as dividends are treated as a mutation of property and take the character of the stock from which they originated.
Tirado v. Tirado,
. Although not governing on the issue of state law presented in this case, the Internal Reve
*323
nue Code’s tax treatment of liquidating distributions seems comparable. The Internal Revenue Code states, "Amounts received by a shareholder in a distribution in complete liquidation of a corporation shall be treated as in full payment in exchange for the stock.” 26 U.S.C. § 331(a) (2002);
see also generally Hellmich v. Hellman,
. Stace did not object at trial to the trial court proceeding as if the expert testimony would supplement the record already before the trial court from the previous proceeding. See Tex R.App. P. 33.1(a).
