Aрpellant, Leonard Barrett Tharp (ex-wife), brought suit to partition certain retirement benefits asserting that they were not divided in her divorce from appellee, Blucher Stanley Tharp (ex-husband). The trial court granted the ex-husband’s motion for summary judgment finding that the retirement benefits were divided by virtue of a residuary clause, and thus the claim was barred by res judicata. In this appeal, the ex-wife asserts that the trial court erred in granting the motion because genuine issues of fact existed as to whether the residuary clause covered the retirement benefits. We disagree and affirm the trial court’s judgment.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The parties had been married sixteen years when their divorce was granted in 1971. A settlement agreement, incorporated into the decree of divorce, awarded certain sрecific assets to the ex-wife, including *468 the house, all community property furnishings, an automobile, and a cash payment. The agreement provided that the ex-husband would receive his personal items, a car, and certain community property items: a portable television set, power tools and thе paintings located in his office. Paragraph IX of the settlement agreement stated in relevant part:
It is agreed by and between the parties hereto that the remainder of the marital estate of the parties shall be set aside as the separate property and estate of [ex-husband] hеrein.
Sixteen years after the divorce, the ex-wife filed this partition action claiming that she and her ex-husband were tenants in common as to the ARCO and United Stаtes military retirement benefits. She asserted that they were undivided assets because they were not specifically mentioned in the agreement or the dеcree.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The function of a summary judgment is not to deprive a litigant of his right to a full hearing on the merits of any real issue of fact, but to eliminate patently un-meritоrious claims and untenable defenses.
Gulbenkian v. Penn,
1. The movant for summary judgment has the burden of showing that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
2. In deciding whеther there is a disputed material fact issue precluding summary judgment, evidence favorable to the non-movant will be taken as true.
3. Every reasonable inference must be indulged in favor of the non-movant and any doubts resolved in its favor.
Nixon v. Mr. Property Management,
Texas law is clear that retirement benefits are community property divisible upon divorce. If a divorce decree fails to make provisiоn for such assets, a tenancy in common results, which is subject to a subsequent partition.
Taggart v. Taggart,
Thus, the dispositive issue before us is whether the residuary clause that awarded “the remainder of the marital estate” to the ex-husband encompassed the retirement benefits which were not specifically mentioned in the settlement agreement or the decree of divorce. We hold that the retirement benefits were included in the divorce decree by virtue of the residuary clause, and that the present cause of action was correctly barred.
While we have not found any case interpreting the exact wording of this clause, several courts of appeals have considered substantially similar provisions and we find their reasoning to be persuasive. One of the more recent cases dealing with residuary or “catch-all” provisions is
Carreon v.
*469
Morales,
We believe that every effort should be made to give some meaning and effect to every paragraph of the property settlement agreement, including thе residuary paragraph. Obviously, the parties meant for those clauses to have some effect upon their property rights and particularly upon any community property which had not been specifically provided for in the other parts of the property settlement agreement.
Id. at 245.
In a comparable partition action,
Jacobs v. Cude,
By its very nature, a residuary clause encompasses those things not specified in the decree but included in the community properly under the jurisdiction of the court. Othеrwise, a party to an earlier judgment would be able to collaterally “chip away” at the ownership status of property already adjudicatеd by a court, and the entire purpose of the residuary clause would be destroyed.
Id. at 260.
Teaff v. Ritchey,
The crux of the ex-wife’s argumеnt is that a genuine fact issue exists as to whether the retirement benefits were
contemplated
when the residuary clause was included in the property agreement. Her cоunsel conceded during oral argument that the issues of ambiguity, fraud, accident, or mistake were not raised in the trial court. The question of whether a contract is ambiguous is one of law for the court.
R & P Enter. v. LaGuarta Gavrel & Kirk, Inc.,
