OPINION ON REHEARING
After reviewing Appellant’s motion for rehearing, we deny the motion, withdraw our March 20, 2003 opinion and judgment, and substitute the following in their place.
In ten issues, Appellant Owen C. Zept-ner complains about the trial court’s division of the community estate upon his divorce from Appellee Frances R. Zeptner. Because we hold that the trial court abused its discretion in dividing the com *732 munity estate, we reverse and remand in part and affirm in part.
Factual BackgRound
Owen and Frances were married on or about November 26,1986 and separated on or about October 28, 1998. They had no children. Owen, Frances, and Paul Cary, a tracing expert, testified at trial. During the trial, the trial court struck both parties’ other experts for discovery violations. Additionally, all of Frances’s exhibits were returned to her after trial at her attorney’s request, so they are not in the appellate record. In the divorce decree, the trial court awarded Owen the following community property:
(1) the lot at 100 East Little, Hamilton, Texas;
(2) the lot at 106 East Little, Hamilton, Texas;
(3) all household assets in his possession or subject to his sole control;
(4) all of his clothing, jewelry, and personal effects;
(5) all funds in his sole name or subject to his sole control, including the business checking account located at SouthTrust Bank;
(6) all retirement funds due to his own employment, including the Fidelity Investment IRA in the amount of $11,239.80;
(7) all union benefits;
(8) all life insurance policies insuring his life;
(9) all brokerage accounts, stocks, bonds, and mutual funds, and securities registered in his name, including dividends, stock splits, and other connected privileges;
(10) the 1994 Chevrolet pickup, valued at $8,000;
(11) the tractor and trailer, valued at $5,000;
(12) insurance checks, valued at $496.95;
(13) $24,000 from the Bank United account; and
(14) $80,000 enhancement value of Petitioner’s separate property business known as Accu-Tech Machine and Manufacturing.
The trial court awarded Frances the following community property:
(1) the community residence;
(2) all household assets in her possession or subject to her sole control;
(3) all of her clothing, jewelry, and personal effects;
(4) all funds in her sole name or subject to her sole control;
(5) all retirement funds due to her own employment, including the First Savings Bank IRA in the approximate amount of $49,093.35 and the J.C. Penney’s Retirement account in the approximate amount of $16,000;
(6) all union benefits;
(7) all life insurance policies insuring her life;
(8) all brokerage accounts, stocks, bonds, mutual funds, and securities registered in her name, including dividends, stock splits, and other connected privileges, including fifteen shares of Sears Roebuck and Company stock, five shares of Dean Witter Discover and Company stock, and twenty-six shares of Allstate Corporation stock, valued at $1300;
(9) the 1998 Chevrolet Monte Carlo, valued at $12,000;
(10) the prepaid burial plan, valued at $11,000;
(11) $12,500, representing one-half of the improvements made to Owen’s *733 separate residence at 104 E. Little, Hamilton, Texas; and
(12) $20,000 from the Bank United account plus any remaining balance after Owen’s award of $65,000 was paid.
Owen and Frances were each ordered to pay (a) any debts individually incurred since the separation and (b) all encumbrances, taxes, liens, assessments, and other charges due or to become due on the property each was awarded in the decree unless the decree expressly provided otherwise. The trial court confirmed the following as Owen’s separate property: Accu-Tech Machine & Manufacturing,
including but not limited to all furniture, fixtures, machines, equipment, inventory, cash, receivables, accounts, goods, and supplies; all personal property used in connection with the operation of the business; and all rights and privileges, past, present, or future, arising out of or in connection with the operation of the business;
the Hamilton residence; and $41,000 in the Bank United account.
In his motion for new trial, Owen complained that the trial court had erred in dividing the community estate by not considering the fact that Owen had suffered a stroke and attendant medical problems after the trial was completed but before judgment was rendered. Owen argued that as a result of his health problems, he had been unable to work for about six months and could only work part-time thereafter. Further, he alleged that he had incurred substantial bills during this period, which he was unable to pay, and that he had a deficit of $28,884.26, which the court had failed to consider in rendering judgment. Finally, Owen stated that he had been forced to liquidate his Fidelity IRA, take out a $5,500 loan, and collateralize the Hamilton lots, and that the trial court had failed to consider these increased liabilities and decreased assets in its property division.
Other than a medical records affidavit, there was apparently no evidence in the record at the time the judgment was rendered to prove Owen’s claims. The same affidavit was attached to the motion for new trial, as well as a summary of outstanding bills and available cash, but no medical records, notes, or collateral agreements appear in the record before us. The trial court denied the motion for new trial.
In findings of fact set out in the decree, the trial court found:
1. The value of the community residence is $120,000;
2. The value of 100 East Little Road, Hamilton, Texas is $7,000;
3. The value of 106 East Little Road, Hamilton, Texas is $6,000.
4. “[T]he ‘enhanced value’ of [Owen’s] separate property business, Accu-Tech Machine and Manufacturing, ... is $80,000.00.”
5. “[R]eimbursable improvements” were made to [Owen’s] separate property home “at 104 East Little Road, in the amount of $25,000.00.”
6. The Bank United account has an approximate balance of $81,000, $41,000 of which is Owen’s separate property. The remaining $40,000 balance is community.
7. Frances’s prepaid burial policy is valued at $11,000.
8. The present value of Frances’s J.C. Penney retirement plan is $16,000.
9. Owen’s tractor and trailer are valued at $5,000.
10.“[Owen’s] reimbursement claims are valued at -0-.”
*734 Legal Analysis
A trial court is charged with dividing the community estate in a “just and right” manner, considering the rights of both parties. Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 7.001 (Vernon 1998). The party complaining of the trial court’s division of property must demonstrate from evidence in the record that the division was so unjust that the trial court abused its discretion.
Pletcher v. Goetz,
Reimbursement Claim For Ex-Husband’s Lien
In issues six, seven, and eight, Owen complains about the trial court’s refusal to order reimbursement from Frances’s separate estate to the community estate for community funds that were used to pay off a lien to Frances’s ex-husband. Specifically, Owen complains that the trial court’s finding that the reimbursement claim was worth zero was against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence. Alternatively, Owen claims that the evidence conclusively established the claim’s value at $16,000 (issue six); that the trial court erred in failing to value the claim at $16,000 (issue seven); and that the trial court abused its discretion by fading to consider the claim in its division of the community estate (issue eight).
Findings of fact entered in a case tried to the court have the same force and dignity as a jury’s answers to jury questions.
Anderson v. City of Seven Points,
If an appellant is attacking the legal sufficiency of an adverse answer to an issue on which he had the burden of proof, the appellant must overcome two hurdles.
Victoria Bank & Trust Co. v. Brady,
In reviewing an issue asserting that a finding is “against the great weight and preponderance” of the evidence, we must consider and weigh all of the evidence, both the evidence that tends to prove the existence of a vital fact as well as evidence that tends to disprove its existence.
Ames v. Ames,
Claims for reimbursement are equitable claims falling within the discretion of the trial court.
Vallone v. Vallone,
The party claiming reimbursement bears the burden of establishing the net benefit to the payee estate.
Vallone,
In her brief, Frances contends that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying reimbursement to the community for funds expended in extinguishing the lien because the funds were either sole management or joint management community property. Alternatively, Frances contends that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying reimbursement to the community for funds expended in extinguishing the lien because the obligation to her ex-husband was imposed by court order. We hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to award reimbursement in this instance because Owen did not establish the net benefit to Frances’s separate property estate.
The record reveals conflicting testimony about the amount repaid by the *736 community and the source of the funds. Owen testified that he wrote Frances two checks from the business account for a total of $16,600. Frances testified that those checks were to repay her for money that she had loaned Owen. She also testified that she had paid off the lien to her ex-husband from money that she had earned and that the note had been for $15,000. In his direct examination of Frances, Owen’s attorney stated:
Q. ... In your deposition on page 74, line 23, I ask[ed] you: “Wasn’t there a note to your ex-husband of 16,600 that was an obligation from a prior divorce?” And how did you answer?
A. It wasn’t 16,600. It was 15,000.
Q. Okay. I didn’t ask you that. How did you answer?
A. Well, I answered yes, but—
Because the evidence conflicted on the amount of the payment to extinguish the note, Owen failed to conclusively prove the maximum benefit to Frances’s separate estate; that is, Owen failed to prove the actual amount that the community paid Frances’s ex-husband to extinguish the lien.
See Vallone,
Owen also failed to establish the offsetting benefits to the community estate. Frances testified that the couple lived in her home eight years before she sold it and that Owen never contributed any rent or mortgage payments for the privilege. She also testified that her total proceeds from the sale of the home went toward the purchase of the community residence. Owen testified that the community made some improvements to the home, including a pool. He also offered evidence that the community did make the mortgage payments from the time of marriage until the home was sold. He disputed Frances’s contention that the sales proceeds went toward the purchase of the community residence.
Owen offered no evidence about the offsetting benefits to the community of extinguishing the lien.
Vallone,
The trial judge was the sole judge of the facts in this case. He was therefore the sole judge of the credibility of the evidence and the weight to assign it.
Montgomery Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Davis,
Reimbursement Claim for Improvements to Owen’s Separate Residence
In issues three, four, and five, Owen complains about the trial court’s finding that the community was entitled to reimbursement of $25,000 for improvements made to Owen’s separate residence at the community’s expense. Specifically, Owen contends that there was no evidence, or insufficient evidence, to support the finding (issue three); that the trial court erred in valuing the claim at $25,000 (issue four); and that the trial court abused its discretion in considering the claim in dividing the community estate (issue five). Again, we note that the legal and factual sufficiency standards of review are subsumed under the abuse of discretion standard.
Beaumont Bank,
In determining a “no-evidence” issue, we are to consider only the evidence and inferences that tend to support the finding and disregard all evidence and inferences to the contrary.
Bradford v. Vento,
An assertion that the evidence is “insufficient” to support a fact finding means that the evidence supporting the finding is so weak or the evidence to the contrary is so overwhelming that the answer should be set aside and a new trial ordered.
Garza v. Alviar,
The measure of reimbursement when one marital estate expends funds or assets to make capital improvements to the property of another marital estate is the enhancement in value to the receiving estate.
Anderson v. Gilliland,
Frances testified that Owen told her that he spent about $45,000 during the marriage on improvements to the Hamilton residence. Owen testified that the property was appraised at $23,800 for tax purposes. His exhibit 18, admitted into *738 evidence, shows that the property was appraised at $23,890 on January 1, 1999 and January 1, 2000. There was no evidence about the value of the property before the improvements were added. The evidence was thus both legally and factually insufficient to support the finding that the value of the reimbursement claim was $25,000. Frances did not satisfy her burden of proving the enhanced value to the Hamilton property. Consequently, we hold that the trial court abused its discretion in awarding the community reimbursement of $25,000 for the improvements made to that property. We sustain Owen’s fourth and fifth issues.
Accu-Tech
In his first two issues, which he argues together, Owen challenges the valuation of Accu-Tech. In issue one, Owen contends that there was no evidence or insufficient evidence to support the valuation of Accu-Tech at $80,000. In issue two, he contends that the trial court erred in valuing Accu-Tech at its “enhanced value” rather than at its fair market value. We note at the outset that the trial court did not assign a value to Accu-Tech, which was Owen’s sole proprietorship before the marriage and thus his separate property. The court only assigned a value of $80,000 to the community’s reimbursement claim.
Owen argues that this award was improperly comprised of equipment purchased during the marriage and professional goodwill. We disagree. This award did not include a value for the equipment because elsewhere in the decree, the trial court awarded Owen as his separate property all equipment used by the business, even the equipment purchased during the marriage.
Owen also contends that the trial court should not have included goodwill in the computation of the value of Accu-Tech because the only goodwill in Accu-Tech was his professional goodwill. We agree with Owen that professional goodwill is not a community asset subject to division.
Nail v. Nail,
Owen also contends that “enhanced value” is a measure of reimbursement, not a method of valuation, and that no reimbursement was appropriate with respect to Accu-Tech. Within the discussion of his issues, Owen specifically argues that any equipment acquired during the marriage and used by the business was community property and that the trial court should have divided either the equipment or its fair market value between the parties as community property. It is true that the equipment acquired during the marriage but used by the business was community property. Tex. Fam.Code Ann. § 3.003(a). The trial court erred by not characterizing the equipment as community property and by confirming it as Owen’s separate property.
In addition to the equipment that should have been characterized as community property, our review of the record shows that the community had at least two reimbursement claims against Owen’s separate estate regarding Accu-Tech that the trial court could have properly recognized if Frances had satisfied her burden of proof — a claim for community funds spent on improvements and a claim for Owen’s *739 time, talent, and labor expended to unreasonably benefit his separate estate.
According to the evidence, equipment was purchased during the marriage at a cost of over $110,000. Frances’s reimbursement claim regarding Accu-Tech in her inventory and appraisement, which was admitted into evidence, provided:
At the time of marriage, Accu-Tech was small, with manual equipment, and no revenue. Since the date of marriage, [an] expensive computerized numerical control (CNC) machine was purchased, along with continual upgrades, 3 computers, and a milling machine, that was purchased to enhance the business known as Accu-Tech. Amount claimed: $130,000.
Because the amount claimed is more than the cost of the equipment, it is clear from this statement that Frances combined the value of the equipment, whatever she thought it was, with the increase in the value of the business to reach her claim of $130,000.
Frances testified that Owen spent about $40,000 on improving the land and building on which Accu-Tech is located. Again, the measure of reimbursement when one marital estate expends funds or assets to improve the real property of another marital estate is the enhancement in value to the receiving estate.
Anderson,
Additionally, the community estate has a reimbursement claim when the community’s time, talent, and labor are used to benefit and enhance a separate estate beyond what is reasonably necessary to maintain and preserve the separate estate without adequately compensating the community.
Jensen v. Jensen,
Owen testified that Accu-Tech was worth $30,500 at the time of trial. His income tax returns showed an accumulated net profit of about $35,000 for the last five fiscal years before the divorce. He admitted to several cash disbursements from company funds during the marriage, from which the judge could have inferred that the community was inadequately compensated, including a 1995 personal loan of $22,500 to an acquaintance and several disbursements to his adult sons by a prior marriage. Frances’s testimony also demonstrated that Owen provided her with very little money to pay the mortgage and other household expenses during the marriage. During Owen’s attorney’s cross-examination of Frances, three checks Owen wrote to Frances that she endorsed were admitted into evidence. They totaled $2,800 and spanned over five years. The evidence also showed disbursements from the business for a down payment on the community residence and for a car.
Despite all this evidence, Frances did not provide evidence to establish the value of Owen’s services or how much income the community had already received from the business. She thus did not establish the value of the reimbursement claim for
*740
time, toil, and efforts expended to enhance Accu-Tech.
See Jensen,
Frances asserts in her brief that issues one and two are moot because Owen received the entire value of Accu-Tech, including the equipment purchased during the marriage. We cannot agree. The community’s worth was distorted negatively by whatever value the trial court assigned to the equipment improperly characterized as Owen’s separate property. This error benefited Owen. But the inappropriate reimbursement of $80,000 to the community artificially inflated the community’s worth and decreased the actual value of Owen’s share of the community estate. That is, Owen’s portion of the community included $80,000 worth of nothing, because the reimbursement claims were not proved, but Frances’s portion of the community, which included not reimbursement but actual, tangible assets, was comprised of property with actual value. She thus got a higher dollar value and a higher percentage of the community estate than the trial court intended.
Because there is no evidence that the community had an $80,000 reimbursement claim against his separate estate, we sustain Owen’s first issue. Because the equipment purchased by the community but used by Accu-Tech was incorrectly characterized as Owen’s separate property, we sustain Owen’s second issue in part. See Tex.R.App. P. 38.1(e) (“The statement of an issue or point will be treated as covering every subsidiary question that is fairly included.”).
Division of the Community Estate
In his ninth issue, Owen asserts that the trial court abused its discretion by failing to divide the community in a just and right manner.
See
Tex. Fam.Code ANN. § 7.001 (stating that a trial court is required to divide the community estate in a just and right manner). While the division does not have to be equal, it does have to be equitable.
O’Carolan v. Hopper,
We have already held that the trial court erred in miseharacterizing com
*741
munity property as Owen’s separate property. Owen claims that the trial court should have valued the equipment at its fair market value. An asset’s fair market value is usually the best evidence of its value.
See Beavers v. Beavers,
We have also already held that the trial court abused its discretion in awarding the community reimbursement for improvements made to Owen’s Hamilton residence and to Accu Tech. The $25,0000 reimbursement for improvements to the Hamilton residence, however, was split equally between the parties; it therefore did not affect the division. The $80,000 reimbursement for improvements to Accu-Tech, as explained above, did affect the division.
From our review of the decree, the trial court awarded Owen roughly forty percent and Frances roughly sixty percent of a community estate worth about $416,140, including the reimbursement awards. When we deduct the reimbursement awards from the community, however, Owen received about 25% and Frances received about 75% of a community estate worth about $311,140. Even if we added $21,650, the fair value of the improperly characterized equipment according to Owen, back into the community estate solely for our calculation of the total magnitude of the errors, Owen’s share of the community estate would still only be about 30% to Frances’s 70%, or about $103,400 to her $229,400. Based on the record before us, we cannot say that the trial court’s errors had only a minimal impact on the division. The trial court intended to award Owen about forty percent of the community; Owen only received about thirty percent.
Consequently, based on the record before us, we hold that the trial court did not divide the community estate in a just and right manner and that the division was so unjust that the trial court’s actions amounted to an abuse of discretion on this ultimate issue. We sustain Owen’s ninth issue.
In his tenth issue, Owen contends that “the errors of law made by the trial court probably caused the rendition of an improper judgment by incorrectly defining the parties[’] community estate which then prevented the trial court from dividing the estate in a just and right manner.” In other words, Owen contends that the trial court’s abuse of discretion was harmful.
See
Tex.R.App. P. 44.1(a). We agree and sustain this issue. “Once reversible error affecting the ‘just and right’ division of the community estate is found, the court of appeals must remand the entire community estate for a new division.”
Jacobs v. Jacobs,
Because of our disposition of this issue, we do not address Owen’s complaints about the trial court’s failure to grant a new trial. See Tex.R.App. P. 47.1.
Conclusion
Having held that the trial court abused its discretion in dividing the community estate, we affirm the parties’ divorce, but we reverse and remand this case to the trial court for a new division of the community estate.
