Go to main navigation
16360 Park Ten Place, Suite 327, Houston, Texas 77084

Property Division in Divorce: Valuation of Marital Property

 

Property Division in Divorce: Valuation of Marital Property

 

In divorce cases, courts usually must divide the parties’ marital property between them. Marital property usually includes both marital assets and marital debts, and generally consists of all property acquired by both or either of the spouses during the marriage, other than property acquired by inheritance or gift from a third party. State divorce laws handle marital property differently depending on whether the state follows equitable distribution, straight community property, “all property,” or dual property rules.

Valuation usually is simple for liquid marital assets, such as bank accounts or liquid securities. For other assets, the spouses may agree on a value, or an independent appraisal may be used if the spouses cannot agree on a value. Hiring an expert can be expensive, and spouses should incur such expenses only on advice of counsel and if it is reasonable to do so.

Separate property can become marital property through commingling, by the spouses’ agreement, or by a spouse’s gift to the marital estate. The spouse claiming a separate interest in commingled property may trace it to recover its separate character. Marital property can include property receivable as passive income from marital property, such as rents and dividends. Pension rights, salable stock option rights, or retirement or other employment benefits accrued during marriage usually are considered marital property. Marital property also can include recovery from personal injury actions, worker compensation claims, social security disability suits, and similar actions to recover wages lost during the marriage; reimbursement for medical bills incurred and paid with marital property; and damage to marital property. A spouse’s degree or professional license cannot be divided, but a spouse’s professional practice may be valued for division.

Parties to divorce proceedings often begin with an inventory of their separate property claims, and then treat the remainder as marital property and/or divisible property. Finally, marital debts are tabulated for division. Generally, valuation is done close to the date the property division order is issued. If the spouses mutually agree to a division of assets, then the divorce decree can reflect their division agreement. Otherwise, the divorce court or a mediator usually determines the property division.

Experienced Legal Representation in the Greater Houston area

Help with your divorce, child custody, or other family law issue is only a call away. Contact Robert Reid McInvale toll-free at , or complete our online contact form.

Come meet us at either of our TWO locations for your convenience:

1. NW Harris County Office
One Chasewood Bank Bldg.
20333 SH 249 @ Chasewood Park Drive, near Louetta and just south of Hwy 99
serving Cypress, Tomball, Spring and The Woodlands

2. West Office
16360 Park Ten Place,
Serving West Houston, Katy and Ft. Bend County

Your case can be handled by Reid McInvale in YOUR county of residence or any other county in the Greater Houston Area and the entire State of Texas.

Call for an appointment:

Main number 281-955-1111
Toll-Free Number: 866-959-7824
The Woodlands call 281-367-4422