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Fraud on the Community Estate | Dreelan v. Dreelan (2026)

New Texas Court of Appeals Opinion - Analyzed for Family Law Attorneys

Michael Eugene Dreelan v. Martha Estupian Dreelan, 05-25-00665-CV, May 13, 2026.

On appeal from 422nd Judicial District Court, Kaufman County, Texas

Synopsis

The Dallas Court of Appeals reaffirmed that a divorce court may find both actual and constructive fraud on the community estate where one spouse uses superior control, a power of attorney, and the marital fiduciary relationship to divert community assets without the other spouse’s informed consent. When the evidence shows misdirected sale proceeds, unaccounted withdrawals, or transfers to third parties, the trial court may reconstitute the community estate and award a money judgment under Texas Family Code section 7.009 as part of a just-and-right division.

Relevance to Family Law

This is a significant property-division case for Texas family lawyers because it sharpens how fraud-on-the-community theories can be tried and proven in divorce litigation. Dreelan underscores that consent to a transaction in the abstract is not the same as informed consent to how community funds are ultimately used, and that a spouse’s use of a power of attorney can intensify fiduciary obligations rather than insulate the transaction. For litigators handling divorce cases involving concealed transfers, business distributions, “cash” withdrawals, paramour spending, tracing disputes, or pre-divorce repositioning of real property, this opinion provides practical authority for reconstitution, money judgments, and disproportional division arguments.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The parties married in 2003 and acquired a residence in Forney during the marriage. Around 2018, they moved to a house in Terrell. The wife believed the Terrell acquisition was a joint marital venture. According to the trial court’s findings, she signed a power of attorney at the husband’s request in connection with the sale of the Forney residence and did not know he was treating the Terrell house as his separate property until he filed for divorce.

The divorce was filed in 2023. The wife counter-petitioned for a disproportionate division based in part on fraud on the community estate. At the bench trial, both parties testified, as did forensic accountants for each side. The trial court found that the husband sought to place the Terrell house in his separate estate in anticipation of a future divorce, represented that proceeds from the sale of the Forney home would be used to purchase the Terrell house, and obtained the wife’s reliance on that representation to the detriment of the community estate.

The trial court also found that the husband admitted extramarital relationships, transferred at least approximately $10,000 to one woman with whom he had an affair, and wasted additional community assets through gifts, third-party transfers, and unaccounted withdrawals to cash. It further found that he diverted distributions or dividends and dissipated community property without the wife’s knowledge or consent. Based on that evidence, the trial court found both constructive and actual fraud on the community estate and awarded the wife a $133,979.16 judgment tied to the reconstituted estate, particularly as related to the Forney house sale.

On appeal, the husband attacked the fraud findings and argued that the award improperly gave the wife a single lump-sum recovery in violation of the one-satisfaction rule. The Dallas Court of Appeals affirmed.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

The court operated within the standard Texas framework governing property division in divorce and fraud on the community:

Application

The opinion reflects a straightforward but important application of long-settled Texas community-property doctrine to a familiar modern fact pattern: one spouse had informational superiority, transactional control, and practical leverage over community assets, and then used that control to reposition value outside the other spouse’s reach.

The husband’s appellate argument focused heavily on formal consent. He contended that the wife signed a power of attorney for the sale of the Forney house and had access to the account into which the proceeds were deposited, so there could be no fraud as a matter of law. But the trial court’s findings, which the court of appeals left undisturbed, drew the legally critical distinction between participating in a transaction and consenting to the ultimate disposition of community property. The wife’s evidence was that she believed the sale proceeds were going into a jointly beneficial replacement residence, while the husband was actually using the transaction structure to acquire and preserve the Terrell property as his own separate asset in anticipation of divorce. That is precisely the kind of concealment and self-dealing that supports constructive fraud, and in the right evidentiary posture, actual fraud as well.

The fiduciary overlay mattered. The trial court expressly found not only the ordinary fiduciary relationship between spouses, but also an additional fiduciary duty arising from the power of attorney. That finding gave the court a stronger basis to presume unfairness once the husband benefited personally from the transaction without full disclosure. In other words, the power of attorney did not sanitize the transfer; it heightened the duty of transparency.

The court also accepted the trial court’s reliance on broader dissipation evidence. This was not just a single real-estate dispute. The record included evidence of transfers to a paramour, additional gifts or transfers to third parties, withdrawals to cash that were not accounted for, and distributions from a business that did not benefit the community. Under Texas fraud-on-the-community law, unaccounted-for community funds controlled by one spouse can support a waste finding even where every dollar cannot be traced to a named recipient. That point is especially useful for trial lawyers confronting incomplete records, cash extraction, or business-account opacity.

Finally, the equitable remedy tracked the statute. Rather than treating the claim as a tort claim for damages, the trial court reconstituted the estate and awarded a money judgment as part of the just-and-right division. That is consistent with Schlueter and section 7.009. The appellate affirmance signals substantial deference to trial courts that make detailed findings, tie the remedy to identified diverted value, and explain why the award is necessary to restore equity.

Holding

The Dallas Court of Appeals held that the evidence supported the trial court’s finding that the husband committed actual and constructive fraud on the community estate. A spouse who disposes of community assets without the other spouse’s informed consent, or who uses a marital or agency fiduciary relationship to benefit himself without full disclosure, can be held liable for fraud on the community. The wife’s signing of a power of attorney and her nominal access to a bank account did not negate fraud where the evidence showed she was unaware of the husband’s adverse claim and did not consent to the ultimate diversion of community value.

The court also upheld the trial court’s equitable remedy. Where evidence shows diverted home-sale proceeds, unaccounted cash withdrawals, or transfers to third parties, the trial court may reconstitute the community estate and award a money judgment under the Family Code as part of a just-and-right division. The appellate court rejected the husband’s challenge to the lump-sum award and affirmed the judgment in full.

Practical Application

For family-law litigators, Dreelan is best read as a trial blueprint. If you represent the claimant spouse, this case supports framing the theory in layered fashion: fiduciary duty between spouses, fiduciary duty under any power of attorney, presumption of constructive fraud from nonconsensual disposition, actual fraud from intentional diversion, and statutory reconstitution under section 7.009. The strongest cases will connect a specific transaction—such as sale proceeds from a marital residence—to a concealed title decision, third-party transfer, or unaccounted depletion of funds.

If you represent the spouse accused of waste or diversion, Dreelan is a warning against overreliance on formalities. A signature on closing documents, nominal account access, or general awareness that money moved is not enough if the opposing party can show lack of informed consent, lack of disclosure, or a concealed adverse purpose. Defense strategy should therefore focus on documented disclosure, written consent, legitimate community purpose, accounting continuity, and a coherent explanation for any withdrawals, transfers, or business distributions.

The case also has practical significance in disputes involving closely held entities. The trial court treated distributions from the husband’s business during marriage as community property and relied on evidence that the distributions did not redound to the community’s benefit. Lawyers should expect business records, owner draws, K-1s, retained earnings arguments, and undercapitalization themes to remain central in fraud-on-the-community litigation.

Finally, this opinion reinforces the value of findings of fact and conclusions of law. The detailed findings here insulated the decree on appeal. In bench trials involving fraud, waste, reimbursement, and reconstitution, proposed findings should identify the fiduciary relationship, the property diverted, the lack of informed consent, the amount or range of loss, and the basis for the equitable remedy.

Checklists

Pleading a Fraud-on-the-Community Claim

Building the Evidentiary Record

Proving Lack of Informed Consent

Prosecuting the Remedy

Defending Against a Fraud-on-the-Community Claim

Findings, Preservation, and Appeal

Citation

Dreelan v. Dreelan, No. 05-25-00665-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Dallas May 13, 2026, no pet.) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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