Property Presumption Controls Divorce Characterization | Sanchez v. Hernandez (2026)
Maria Sanchez v. Ysidro Hernandez, 01-24-00987-CV, July 02, 2026.
On appeal from 309th District Court, Harris County, Texas
Synopsis
In Sanchez v. Hernandez, the First Court of Appeals reinforced a basic but frequently outcome-determinative rule in Texas divorce litigation: property possessed during marriage is presumed community property unless a spouse rebuts that presumption by clear and convincing tracing evidence. Where the jury found the disputed properties were not community property, but no evidence established that either spouse acquired them as separate property, the trial court could not bypass the verdict and declare the parties owned the assets as separate-property tenants in common; the court reversed and rendered judgment consistent with the verdict.
Relevance to Family Law
This case matters directly to Texas divorce practitioners because it sits at the intersection of characterization, jury submission, and post-verdict judicial authority. In property-heavy divorces, especially those involving title in a spouse’s name, third-party claims, family businesses, or informal nominee arrangements, Sanchez confirms that title alone does not answer characterization, the community presumption remains the starting point, and separate-property claims must be proven through competent tracing. It also underscores an equally practical point: once the jury has answered the characterization question submitted to it, the trial court cannot invent a new characterization unsupported by the pleadings, charge, or evidence simply to reach what it perceives as an equitable result.
Case Summary
Fact Summary
Maria Sanchez and Ysidro Hernandez were married in 2000. Their Houston residence was undisputedly community property. The controversy involved a group of properties used in connection with a bail bond business operated for Sanchez’s adult son, Antonio.
According to Sanchez and Antonio, Antonio funded and built the business, but because he was not yet a U.S. citizen, the bail bond license and related paperwork had to be placed in Sanchez’s name. They testified that Antonio purchased numerous properties between 2012 and 2021 with his own money to use as collateral in the business, but title was placed in Sanchez’s and Hernandez’s names until Antonio could obtain citizenship and hold the assets directly. Once Antonio became a U.S. citizen in 2021, Sanchez and Hernandez executed deeds transferring the properties to him.
Hernandez challenged that account. In the divorce, he alleged the properties were community assets and that Sanchez fraudulently transferred them to Antonio to deprive the community estate of value. He also asserted fraud- and conspiracy-based theories against Sanchez and her adult children, though those non-divorce claims were dismissed before trial.
At trial, the evidence supporting Hernandez’s community-property theory was notably thin. He acknowledged Antonio started the bail bond business and that the license was initially held in Sanchez’s name because Antonio lacked citizenship. Although Hernandez suggested the properties came “out of the bail bonds” and at one point referred generally to money from a joint account, he admitted he did not know how much had been spent, did not handle the money, was unaware of income of his used to acquire the properties, and had no proof he paid for them.
The jury found the Houston residence was community property, found the bail bond properties were not community property, and found Sanchez had not committed fraud on the community by transferring them to Antonio. After the verdict, however, the trial court attempted to set it aside and order a new trial sua sponte. Mandamus relief followed. After being directed to vacate the new-trial order, the trial court ultimately entered a divorce decree stating the bail bond properties were the parties’ separate property, with each owning a 50% tenancy-in-common interest. Sanchez appealed.
Issues Decided
The court decided the following issues:
- Whether the Texas Family Code section 3.003 community-property presumption controlled the characterization of the disputed bail bond properties.
- Whether the evidence rebutted that presumption by clear and convincing proof tracing the properties to either spouse’s separate estate.
- Whether the trial court could disregard the jury’s findings that the properties were not community property and that no fraud on the community occurred.
- Whether the trial court could characterize the disputed assets as the spouses’ separate property held 50/50 as tenants in common despite the absence of evidence supporting separate-property acquisition by either spouse.
- Whether the proper appellate disposition was reversal and rendition rather than remand.
Rules Applied
The court applied the core Texas characterization rules governing marital property:
- Under Texas Family Code section 3.003(a), property possessed by either spouse during or on dissolution of marriage is presumed to be community property.
- Under section 3.003(b), a party seeking to overcome that presumption must do so by clear and convincing evidence.
- Separate property must be established by tracing the asset to a constitutionally or statutorily recognized separate-property source, such as pre-marriage ownership, gift, devise, or descent.
- Characterization is determined by inception of title, not by later labels or equitable intuitions.
- A trial court in a divorce case may not disregard jury findings and substitute a different property characterization absent a legal basis to do so, particularly where the substituted characterization lacks evidentiary support.
Although the opinion excerpt provided here is abbreviated, the holding reflects familiar Texas Supreme Court and court-of-appeals principles: the community presumption is strong, title is not dispositive, and separate-property claims fail without disciplined tracing proof.
Application
The First Court’s analysis appears to have proceeded from a straightforward premise: once the disputed properties were shown to have been possessed during marriage, they entered the case cloaked with the section 3.003 community presumption. That presumption did not disappear merely because Sanchez and Antonio testified that Antonio paid for the properties, nor because title had temporarily been placed in the spouses’ names for business or licensing reasons. If the properties were to be characterized as either spouse’s separate property, there had to be clear and convincing tracing evidence connecting their acquisition to a separate-property source belonging to that spouse.
That evidence did not exist. There was no proof that Sanchez acquired the properties before marriage, by gift, devise, or descent, or with separate funds capable of tracing. There was likewise no proof that Hernandez did. The trial court therefore had no evidentiary basis to declare the assets were the spouses’ separate property in equal shares. That characterization was not just unsupported; it was fundamentally inconsistent with the statutory framework.
At the same time, the jury had rejected Hernandez’s theory that the assets were community property and had also rejected his fraud theory concerning the transfer to Antonio. The appellate court treated those findings as controlling within the posture of the case presented and the record developed. Critically, the trial court could not respond to perceived defects in the charge or dissatisfaction with the verdict by imposing a third characterization of its own making. The decree’s “50% separate property each as tenants in common” solution was not a permissible middle ground. It was a judicial recharacterization unsupported by the pleadings, the verdict, and the proof.
The result is a useful reminder that characterization errors are not cured by creative decree language. If the evidence does not establish separate property by clear and convincing tracing, a court cannot simply label the property separate. And if the jury has already resolved the submitted factual disputes, the trial court’s discretion in rendering judgment is constrained by those findings.
Holding
The court held that property possessed by either spouse during marriage or at divorce is presumptively community property under Texas Family Code section 3.003(a), and that rebutting this presumption requires clear and convincing evidence under section 3.003(b). Because no evidence established that either spouse acquired the disputed bail bond properties as separate property, the decree could not characterize those properties as separate property belonging 50% to each spouse as tenants in common.
The court further held that the trial court improperly disregarded the jury’s findings that the disputed properties were not community property and that Sanchez had not committed fraud on the community by transferring them to Antonio. Having no evidentiary basis for a separate-property finding and no authority to override the verdict in the manner it did, the trial court abused its discretion in the property characterization reflected in the decree.
Finally, the court held that the proper appellate remedy was to reverse and render judgment consistent with the verdict, rather than remand for further proceedings. That aspect of the opinion is significant for appellate strategy: when the trial court’s decree is contrary to the verdict and unsupported by the record, rendition may be available.
Practical Application
For family lawyers, Sanchez is less about exotic doctrine than about disciplined case construction. In any divorce involving title irregularities, family-run businesses, cash-based enterprises, or assets temporarily held in a spouse’s name for convenience, tax purposes, licensing, or creditor concerns, counsel must decide early whether the case is truly about characterization, beneficial ownership, reimbursement, fraud on the community, or some combination of those theories. Pleading and proof have to align.
If you represent the spouse asserting separate property, Sanchez is a warning that conclusory testimony about who “really paid” for property will not substitute for tracing. If you represent the spouse relying on the community presumption, the case confirms that the presumption remains potent unless the other side can tie acquisition to a separate source with precision.
The opinion also has charge-conference implications. If the case involves third-party beneficial ownership or nominee title, a binary “community or not community” submission may create avoidable appellate complications unless the theories are carefully framed. But once the charge is submitted and answered, the trial court cannot repair a perceived deficiency by issuing a decree that announces a new characterization unsupported by the verdict.
Practitioners should also note the strategic significance of preserving objections to decree language that exceeds the verdict. This is a classic area where post-verdict vigilance matters. A party who wins the jury charge can still lose in the decree if counsel does not move quickly to challenge judicial recharacterization.
Checklists
Characterization Theory Checklist
- Identify every disputed asset by acquisition date, title holder, and asserted ownership theory.
- Determine whether the theory is true characterization, third-party ownership, reimbursement, fraud on the community, or constructive trust.
- Match each theory to the correct burden of proof.
- Do not assume title in one or both spouses’ names resolves characterization.
- Analyze inception of title for each asset separately.
Separate-Property Proof Checklist
- Obtain source-of-funds records for acquisition of each disputed asset.
- Prepare tracing from a recognized separate-property source.
- Corroborate testimony with bank records, closing documents, deeds, ledgers, tax returns, and business records.
- Segregate any mixed funds and address commingling problems directly.
- Remember that clear and convincing evidence is required to rebut section 3.003.
Community-Presumption Enforcement Checklist
- Plead and emphasize the section 3.003 presumption early.
- Force the opposing party to identify the exact separate-property source claimed.
- Challenge conclusory “it was mine” or “someone else paid” testimony lacking documentary support.
- Highlight gaps in tracing, especially where funds flowed through joint or business accounts.
- Preserve legal- and factual-sufficiency arguments tied to the presumption.
Jury Charge and Verdict Form Checklist
- Submit questions that actually resolve the characterization theories raised by the evidence.
- Include definitions and instructions for community property, separate property, and the clear-and-convincing burden where applicable.
- Avoid charge language that leaves the court guessing what the property is after the verdict.
- If third-party ownership is central, consider whether the charge should address that theory expressly.
- Make a complete record of objections, requested submissions, and refused questions.
Post-Verdict Protection Checklist
- Compare the proposed decree line-by-line against the jury verdict.
- Object immediately to any decree provision that recharacterizes property beyond the verdict.
- Oppose judicial findings unsupported by the jury answers or the record.
- If the court attempts to grant a sua sponte new trial, evaluate mandamus relief promptly.
- Preserve rendition arguments on appeal where the verdict and record allow final disposition.
Fraud-on-the-Community Defense Checklist
- Tie the transfer chronology to preexisting business arrangements or ownership understandings.
- Document the nonspouse transferee’s funding source and beneficial ownership claim.
- Rebut allegations of lack of consideration with evidence of prior agreement, nominee title, or equitable ownership.
- Address signature, acknowledgment, and notary issues with authenticated transfer documents.
- Frame the transfer as consistent with the original ownership arrangement, not a depletion of community assets.
Citation
Maria Sanchez v. Ysidro Hernandez, No. 01-24-00987-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] July 2, 2026, no pet.) (mem. op.).
Full Opinion
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