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Community Property Essentials for Texas divorces

The law in Texas provides that a married couple can agree in writing that either of your separate property can be characterized as community property. This is not the same thing as being co-tenants in separate property. In that sort of relationship, both you and your spouse have a fifty percent interest in whatever piece of separate property is being discussed.

How will different sorts of property be managed?

Property management depends primarily on whether or not the asset is considered joint management or solely managed community property. Wages, salary, or income from separate property are under the spouse’s sole management that earns the income.

When you and your spouse comingle sole management community property that belongs to one of you and jointly managed community property, the solely managed community property becomes jointly managed. Likewise, property of your name or your spouse’s name is presumed to be solely managed community property, absent evidence to the contrary.

What responsibility do you and your spouse have to creditors?

If a creditor wins a judgment against your spouse, what are the potential effects on you? The answer depends upon the nature of the judgment. Suppose the judgment is based merely on a failure to pay as agreed in a contract between your spouse and creditors. In that case, the creditor can only go after your spouse’s separate property and the community property they manage independently.

On the other hand, if it is a tort claim (as, if your spouse induced a creditor to extend them a loan due to fraud), then a creditor would be able to reach out to your own solely managed community property- only to the extent that damages occurred during your marriage. If your spouse committed an offense like negligence or fraud towards a creditor, the bottom line is that. That creditor wins a money judgment in court, all community property owned by you and your spouse (with some exceptions) is fair game to be subject to the creditor’s judgment.

What property is available to a judgment creditor?

To sum it all up: if the claim that the creditor won a judgment on is based in a tort (like negligence), then your spouse’s separate property, solely managed community property, jointly managed community property, and your solely managed community property are exposed to that judgment and can potentially be collected to pay that judgment.

In a claim based on the contract signed between the creditor and your spouse, your spouse’s separate property, solely managed community property, and jointly managed community property is fair game to be collected upon.

What property is not available to a judgment creditor?

There is some property out there that is not subject to being hauled away and sold to pay towards a judgment against your debtor-spouse. In a claim based on negligence or something similar where your spouse owed a duty of care to the creditor, your separate property is not subject to being exposed to that judgment. Likewise, your separate property is not in danger of being exposed to creditors in a contract-based claim, nor is your solely managed community property.

Takeaways from this area of the law on creditors and community property

Either way, your assets in the form of community property may be subject to being used to pay a judgment owed to a creditor that you did not even know about. Liability isn’t just relevant in the area of insurance. It can have a significant application to your life and your marriage.

Tip towards planning regarding community property and creditors

A premarital property agreement can allocate the responsibility to pay debts and shoulder responsibility to pay a particular debt just as quickly as it can divide the property. If you have some exposure to creditors that you do not want to make your spouse potentially liable under, you should consider completing a premarital property agreement.

Likewise, if you are concerned about being held accountable for your spouse’s actions, then you should talk to your fiancé about this possibility. Not knowing is the worst position to be in, so ask about this subject before marriage. It can save you both heartache and frustration once you are married.

As a family law attorney, I see partition and exchange agreements used often to protect assets in situations where one spouse is potentially at risk of being exposed to the evil acts of the other spouse. We illustrated examples of this situation in the sections above where your spouse may end up owing money in a judgment towards a creditor or other plaintiff in a civil lawsuit.

In Texas, the law is that your home is not subject to being gobbled up by a judgment creditor or plaintiff. What many couples will do is to put the home in your name (as the innocent spouse) and to transfer other non-exempt community assets to your spouse’s name. Let’s walk through this concept with an example story.

Recently our office assisted a couple where the wife was a physician. While she and the hospital where she worked did have comprehensive insurance to protect her and her employer, the couple thought it wise to attempt to protect their assets from medical malpractice claims. We agreed and helped negotiate a partition and exchange agreement for the spouses.

This couple’s home was transferred entirely to the physician-wife because the home was not subject to being taken away from them in a potential lawsuit. To make up for the fact that her husband lost out on any of the community property benefits of owning a home, the wife transferred her community property interest in an equal amount of property (and some separate property to even it out) to the husband.

Each spouse walked away with an equal amount of separate property and did so in a way that would allow both parties to be protected in the event of a potential lawsuit. Any lawsuit that resulted in a victory against the wife would not leave their sizeable asset list subject to being taken by a judgment creditor.

Dividing up assets upon a divorce in Texas

Whether or not a piece of property or asset is a part of the community estate or is the separate property of either you or your spouse does not mean much until you all get divorced. Once the divorce is finalized, whatever property is counted as separate goes to whichever of you that separate property belongs to.

Community property is subject to a “just and right” division. An even 50/50 division can occur, but it does not have to, and the judge will consider all factors, evidence, and circumstances when making this decision. Fault in the breakup of the marriage, separate property owned by each spouse, and the future income earning capacity of each spouse will factor into their decision. Whatever “position” you find yourself in at the outset of a divorce, it is critical that you have an experienced advocate in your corner to represent you and your rights in your divorce.

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Other Articles you may be interested in:

  1. What Every Entrepreneur Needs to Know About Community Property Division
  2. What is community property in Texas?
  3. Community property issues in Texas divorces: Wasting of assets by spouses
  4. How does a judge divide up community property in a Texas divorce?
  5. What happens if you and your spouse mix community and separate property?
  6. Characterizing your assets as community or separate property through tracing
  7. Community Property in Texas: What you need to know before you get divorced
  8. Community Property and Credit in Texas Divorces
  9. Community Property Law in Texas
  10. Family Law Cases in Texas: Marital Property and the community presumption
  11. Reimbursement of the Community Estate: Continuing the Discussion on Divorce
  12. Texas Divorce Overview: Dividing Community Property and Debts
  13. Dividing community property in mediation: What can be done to settle your divorce in Texas
  14. The community estate in a Texas Divorce: Where is all of our stuff going?

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