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Section 7.001 Abuse-of-Discretion Review Defeats Property-Division Challenge | In re A.S.L. (2026)

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

In the Interest of A.S.L., a Child, 05-25-00545-CV, July 02, 2026.

On appeal from 439th Judicial District Court, Rockwall County, Texas

Synopsis

A section 7.001 complaint attacking a divorce property division will usually fail if the appellant does not bring forward a record showing the value of the community estate, the value of the assets and liabilities awarded, and how the alleged error materially skewed the just-and-right division. In In re A.S.L., the Dallas Court of Appeals held that, absent findings of fact and absent valuation evidence tying the complained-of debt allocations to a demonstrably disproportionate overall division, no abuse of discretion was shown.

Relevance to Family Law

For Texas family-law litigators, this opinion is a record-preservation case as much as it is a property-division case. It underscores that appellate complaints about reimbursement-type arguments, pendente lite debt allocation, waste, or unequal access to community funds are not self-proving; unless the record permits the appellate court to quantify the estate and measure the effect of the alleged error on the overall division, the presumption in favor of the trial court’s broad discretion will control. The lesson reaches beyond property issues alone: in any bench-tried divorce involving interim conduct, disputed debt, or claims of one-sided use of community assets, trial counsel must build a valuation record and request findings if they want a viable appeal.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The parties were married in 1998 and had two children. By the time of separation, neither spouse was employed; Mother had been a stay-at-home parent for roughly twenty years, and Father had lost his job in 2023 and was receiving unemployment benefits. Before and during the divorce, the parties liquidated life-insurance policies to reduce credit-card debt, later lived largely separate financial lives, and eventually sold the marital residence, splitting net proceeds roughly equally.

The dispute on appeal centered on post-filing debt and use of funds during the pendency of the divorce. Mother contended that she lacked access to substantial community funds allegedly under Father’s control and therefore incurred approximately $44,000 in credit-card debt for living expenses. She further contended that Father used community funds to pay down approximately $52,000 of his own credit-card debt. Father disputed both the characterization and significance of those assertions. He testified that he offered to pay Mother’s then-existing balances before addressing his own, that he did not control her card usage, and that many of Mother’s charges were not necessary living expenses but included furniture purchases for her new residence and Disney trips.

After a bench trial conducted in two settings, the trial court stated it would largely track Father’s proposed property division with some modifications. The court shifted certain retirement/trust-account allocations, awarded Mother an additional amount from one account, and orally stated it would award Mother “9,000 on the credit card debt.” The final decree, however, did not assign values to most awarded accounts, did not quantify the community estate, did not specify values for the disputed credit-card obligations, and did not include findings of fact or conclusions of law. It simply recited that the division was just and right.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

Texas Family Code section 7.001 requires the trial court to divide the community estate in a manner the court deems just and right, having due regard for the rights of each party and any children of the marriage. Under Murff v. Murff, 615 S.W.2d 696 (Tex. 1981), the trial court has wide discretion and may consider a broad range of equitable factors, including disparity in earning capacity, financial condition, obligations, separate estates, and the nature of the property. The division need not be equal.

The Dallas court also relied on the familiar abuse-of-discretion framework described in Chavez v. Chavez, 269 S.W.3d 763 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2008, no pet.). Under that framework, the reviewing court presumes the trial court properly exercised its discretion, and reversal is warranted only if the record shows both a clear abuse of discretion and that the error materially affected the just-and-right division.

The opinion further invoked authorities recognizing the practical difficulty of reviewing a property division when the decree contains no valuations and the appellant failed to obtain findings of fact. Cases such as Mundy v. Mundy, 653 S.W.2d 954 (Tex. App.—Dallas 1983, no writ), and Brown v. Wokocha, 526 S.W.3d 504 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2017, no pet.), stand for the proposition that without trial-court findings or a record establishing values, an appellate court often cannot determine whether the division was an abuse of discretion. The court also cited Slicker v. Slicker, 464 S.W.3d 850 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2015, no pet.), for the proposition that dissipation of community assets may be considered in crafting a just-and-right division.

Application

The Dallas Court of Appeals treated Mother’s complaint as fatally underdeveloped in the one place that mattered most on appeal: the record. Mother did present testimony that she accumulated substantial credit-card debt after filing for divorce and that Father allegedly reduced his own debt with community funds. But the court focused on the larger appellate question, not simply whether those allegations were made. The question was whether the record allowed the court to measure how those disputed debt allocations affected the overall property division.

That showing was missing. The decree did not value the community estate as a whole. It did not assign values to most of the accounts awarded to either spouse. It did not quantify the disputed debts in the decree itself. It did not explain how the trial court arrived at the oral reference to “9,000 on the credit card debt.” And because no findings of fact or conclusions of law were requested or filed, the court of appeals had no formal statement of the trial court’s factual resolutions on disputed questions such as necessity of Mother’s expenditures, any agreement by the parties to be responsible for their own post-filing debt, whether Father had unequal control of funds, or whether any alleged paydown of Father’s cards should have altered the final division.

That void mattered because abuse-of-discretion review in this setting is holistic. A claimed error about one debt category is not enough by itself; the appellant must show that the alleged misallocation materially affected the overall just-and-right division. Here, even assuming Mother raised a legitimate complaint about post-filing debt treatment, she did not establish the values necessary to prove that the total division became unjust, nor did she negate possible implied findings supporting the decree. The appellate court therefore defaulted to the governing presumption: the trial court acted within its broad discretion.

Holding

The court held that Mother failed to demonstrate an abuse of discretion in the property division under Texas Family Code section 7.001. Her complaint that the trial court did not adequately account for her post-filing credit-card debt and Father’s alleged use of community funds to reduce his own debt did not warrant reversal because the appellate record did not establish the value of the overall community estate or show how the alleged error materially affected the final division.

The court also held, in substance, that where the decree does not assign values to the estate or to the major assets awarded, and the parties do not obtain findings of fact and conclusions of law, appellate review is constrained by presumptions favoring the decree. In that circumstance, an appellant who cannot quantify disproportionality or prejudice cannot carry the burden to show section 7.001 error.

Practical Application

This case should change how family-law trial lawyers try and preserve property-division disputes. If your theory is that your client carried living expenses because the other spouse controlled liquidity, or that the other spouse dissipated assets, paid separate obligations with community funds, or manipulated post-separation debt, you need more than testimony that the conduct occurred. You need a trial-ready valuation model that shows the estate’s gross and net value, traces the complained-of transactions into the final division, and demonstrates the mathematical consequence of the error.

The opinion is especially important in cases involving retirement accounts, trust accounts, brokerage accounts, escrow refunds, and unsecured debt because these are often awarded by name without a corresponding finding of value in the decree. If the decree contains no numbers and no findings, appellate counsel is left arguing in the dark. That is usually a losing position under abuse-of-discretion review.

In practical terms, this case reinforces several strategic points:

The case also has crossover relevance in suits affecting the parent-child relationship embedded in divorce proceedings. Interim conduct involving relocation, standing-order violations, and control of finances often informs the trial court’s equitable view of the case even if the appellate issue is framed as property division. Counsel should therefore think about the record globally: conduct evidence may support or undercut equitable allocations, but unless the financial effect is quantified, it may not produce reversible error.

Checklists

Building an Appellate-Safe Property Record

Preserving a Section 7.001 Challenge

Proving Post-Filing Debt Should Affect the Division

Defending Against a Property-Division Appeal

Drafting Better Divorce Decrees for Appeal Resistance

Citation

In the Interest of A.S.L., a Child, No. 05-25-00545-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Dallas July 2, 2026, no pet.) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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