Nash Jesus Gonzales and Gonzales & Gonzales, P.C. v. Marissa Ann Maggio ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                                    ACCEPTED
    03-14-00117-CV
    5443800
    THIRD COURT OF APPEALS
    AUSTIN, TEXAS
    5/27/2015 10:17:25 PM
    JEFFREY D. KYLE
    CLERK
    NO. 03-14-00117-CV
    FILED IN
    3rd COURT OF APPEALS
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE AUSTIN, TEXAS
    THIRD COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    5/27/2015 10:17:25 PM
    AT AUSTIN               JEFFREY D. KYLE
    Clerk
    NASH JESUS GONZALES
    AND GONZALES & GONZALES, P.C.,
    APPELLANTS
    v.
    MARISSA ANN GONZALES,
    APPELLEES
    From the 200th District Court , Travis County Texas
    The Honorable Lora J. Livingston, Presiding
    Trial Court No. D-1-FM-11-005140
    NASH JESUS GONZALES AND GONZALES & GONZALES, P.C.’S
    APPELLANTS’ REPLY BRIEF
    Thomas B. Cowart                  Wasoff & Cowart, P.L.L.C.
    Texas Bar No. 00787295            100 North Central Expressway, Suite 901
    tom@tcowart.com                   Richardson, Texas 75080
    Tel: (214) 692-9700
    Fax: (214) 550-2674
    Attorneys for Appellants Nash Jesus Gonzales
    and Gonzales & Gonzales, P.C.
    ORAL ARGUMENT REQUESTED
    May 27, 2015
    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    Index of Authorities.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ii
    Summary of Argument in Reply. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
    Argument in Reply. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
    I.       The jury’s verdict is not supported by the evidence. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
    A.        The jury’s “latitude” is limited by the evidence. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
    B.        Appellee’s invitation to base the Court’s decision on an
    improperly dismembered Record should be rejected. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
    II.      Appellee’s defense of the Trial Court’s division of the contingent fee
    interest is based on a strained reading of the evidence and proceedings
    before the Trial Court. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
    A.        To get to Appellee’s reading of the June 19, 2012 letter to the
    clients, the Court must improperly read the letter through a
    technical, attorney prism.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
    B.        There was no “winding up” of the Partnership at the final hearing
    or, if it was considered, the relief requested was denied. . . . . . . . . . 14
    Prayer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
    Certificate of Compliance. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
    Certificate of Service.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
    Reply Brief of Appellants                                                                                                Page i
    INDEX OF AUTHORITIES
    Cases                                                                                             Page Nos.
    City of Keller v. Wilson,
    
    168 S.W.3d 802
    (Tex. 2005). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4, 6
    Deinhart v. McGrath-Stroatman,
    
    2010 WL 4595708
    (Tex. App.–Austin 2010, pet. denied). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
    Falk & Fish, L.L.P. v. Pinkston's Lawnmower and Equipment, Inc.,
    
    317 S.W.3d 523
    (Tex. App.–Dallas 2010, no pet.). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
    Gillen v. Williams Bros. Const. Co.,
    
    933 S.W.2d 162
    (Tex. App.–Houston [14th Dist.] 1996, writ denied).. . . . . . . . 3
    Holden v. Holden,
    
    456 S.W.3d 642
    (Tex. App.–Tyler 2015, no pet.). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
    Lenz v. Lenz,
    
    79 S.W.3d 10
    (Tex. 2002). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
    Royden v. Ardoin,
    
    331 S.W.2d 206
    (Tex. 1960). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
    Yasin v. Yasin,
    
    2011 WL 5009895
    (Tex. App.–Austin 2011, no pet.).. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
    Reply Brief of Appellants                                                                                Page ii
    SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT IN REPLY
    To defend the jury’s verdict on the geographic restriction on the primary
    residence of the children in this matter, Appellee relies on two theories, neither or
    which stand up under even the most surface examination. First, Appellee essentially
    argues that the jury’s discretion is so wide that review is unavailable. This, however,
    is directly contrary to established law allowing for review of the evidentiary support
    for the jury’s verdict on geographic restrictions in family law cases. Secondly,
    Appellee argues that the evidence supports the claim that a “move” was in the best
    interest of the children and so the jury’s verdict permitting a “move” is proper. This
    argument, though, relies on taking the evidence completely out of context, something
    this Court may not do.
    Her defense of the Trial Court’s division of the contingency fee interests in the
    Partnership’s former cases suffers from similar defects. Contrary to the requirement
    that the June 19, 2012 letter be read as a reasonable person would, she urges the
    Court to apply a lawyer’s technical reading of the letter to arrive at the conclusion she
    seeks, a conclusion that would undoubtedly be completely surprising to the
    reasonable client. And she urges the Court to indulge an assumption of action by the
    Trial Court that has no foundation in the record and, in fact, is contrary to the
    judgment actually rendered below. Nothing advanced by Appellee excuses the Trial
    Reply Brief of Appellants                                                          Page 1
    Court’s error in reaching out beyond the proper bounds to include the contingency fee
    interests in the community estate.
    ARGUMENT IN REPLY
    There are two areas in the Trial Court’s judgment being challenged here. Each
    will be analyzed in turn.
    I.      The jury’s verdict is not supported by the evidence
    Appellee presents two primary defense to the challenge to the evidentiary
    support for the jury’s verdict. First, Appellee argues essentially that the jury’s
    discretion is so wide on the issue as to make evidentiary review inappropriate.
    Second, Appellee argues that a truncated reading of the evidence supports the verdict.
    Neither of these theories are valid.
    A.       The jury’s “latitude” is limited by the evidence
    Appellee first argues that the jury has discretion to simply pick any restriction
    it finds appropriate under the statute and the form of the jury charge. This claim,
    though, misses this point. Mr. Gonzales does not complain about the form of the jury
    charge or the use of the Pattern Jury Charge in this matter. He contends that the
    jury’s verdict is not supported by the evidence, a requirement recognized by the
    Supreme Court and this Court in this context. Lenz v. Lenz, 
    79 S.W.3d 10
    , 19 -21
    (Tex. 2002); Deinhart v. McGrath-Stroatman, 
    2010 WL 4595708
    , 5-8                   (Tex.
    App.–Austin 2010, pet. denied); see also Yasin v. Yasin, 
    2011 WL 5009895
    (Tex.
    Reply Brief of Appellants                                                          Page 2
    App.–Austin 2011, no pet.). The arguments advanced by Appellee based on the form
    of the charge are red herrings that should not distract the Court.
    Similarly, Mr. Gonzales does not complain about the Trial Court’s response to
    the jury’s question, cited by Appellee. Again, he contends that the jury’s verdict is
    not supported by the evidence, a wholly separate issue. To the extent that the Trial
    Court’s response to the jury is relevant, the absence of a Reporter’s Record reflecting
    the proceedings surrounding the note constitutes a “lost or destroyed” record. See
    Gillen v. Williams Bros. Const. Co., 
    933 S.W.2d 162
    , 163 (Tex. App.–Houston [14th
    Dist.] 1996, writ denied). Mr. Gonzales timely made a request for the Reporter’s
    Record to be prepared and filed in this matter (CR 743, 760). In addition, the Trial
    Court indicated that the Court Reporter would report the trial proceedings, subject to
    certain exceptions not applicable here, (III RR 38, 47-48) and the Trial Court’s
    judgment (the Amended/Corrected Final Decree of Divorce) reflects that the
    proceedings were reported by the “Official Court Reporter” (CR 679). Thus, if the
    Court were to find that the Trial Court’s response to the jury’s question is relevant to
    the determination of the sufficiency of the evidence, the omission from the record of
    the proceedings surrounding that response mandates that the Trial Court’s judgment
    be set aside and a new trial ordered.1 TEX. R. APP. P. 34.6(f).
    1
    In addition, Mr. Gonzales objects to the assertion that he did not object to the Trial Court’s
    instruction on this point as being outside the record. The record does not support this claim and Mr.
    Gonzales disagrees with this claim by Appellee. By this, Mr. Gonzales advises the Court that the
    parties will not be able to agree that the record is as Appellee claims.
    Reply Brief of Appellants                                                                        Page 3
    Neither the form of the jury charge nor the Trial Court’s response to the jury’s
    question is at issue in this appeal–the sufficiency of the evidence to support the
    verdict is.        Appellee’s attempt to distract the Court with these extraneous
    consideration should be ignored.
    B.       Appellee’s invitation to base the Court’s decision on an improperly
    dismembered Record should be rejected
    Appellee presents two major basis for her claim the evidence is sufficient.
    First, she asserts that the evidence demonstrates that it was in the children’s best
    interest that they “move” from Austin. Secondly, she argues that the evidence shows
    that it was in their best interest to separate from Mr. Gonzales, their father. Under
    both theories, though, Appellee invites the Court to rewrite the evidence in the record
    by deleting parts of the testimony that does not comport with her theory. The Texas
    Supreme Court considered this approach to evidentiary review in its City of Keller v.
    Wilson decision, explicitly condemning it:
    More generally, evidence cannot be taken out of context in a way that
    makes it seem to support a verdict when in fact it never did. [FN28] If
    a witness's statement “I did not do that” is contrary to the jury's verdict,
    a reviewing court may need to disregard the whole statement, but cannot
    rewrite it by disregarding the middle word alone.
    FN28. Bostrom Seating, Inc. v. Crane Carrier Co., 
    140 S.W.3d 681
    ,
    684, 685 (Tex.2004) (holding no evidence supported defect as
    comments from deposition “were read out of context”).
    City of Keller v. Wilson, 
    168 S.W.3d 802
    , 812 (Tex. 2005). Yet this is precisely what
    Appellee urges the Court to do here.
    Reply Brief of Appellants                                                              Page 4
    Appellee claims that her expert testified that it was “in the best interest of the
    children that they be able to move from Austin” citing the expert’s testimony and her
    report, which was admitted as an exhibit (Appellee’s Brief, page 14 & n21 (citing 4
    RR 191-192 and 18 RR 106)). The expert’s testimony, though, explicitly tied the
    “move” to a relocation to New York:
    Q. All right. And the final question, move or don't move, you say move,
    right?
    A. Yes.
    Q. You think it's in the best interest of these boys for mom to be able to
    move with them up to New York?
    A. I do.
    Q. And why is that?
    A. All the things we've already said, added support. There's some
    willingness, at least periodic willingness on the father, in that he will be
    going with them, and so that that -- the relationship between Mr.
    Gonzales and his kids can -- can remain and continue to grow. And I
    think she just really needs the support of that extended family to be able
    to sort of handle all of the moving parts of this divorce and their
    co-parenting situation.
    (4 RR 191-1) (emphasis added). The expert’s report also explicitly tied “the move”
    to a relocation to New York:
    I would be supportive of the idea of the move to New York. However, I
    think it is important that this involve some planning and not be done in
    an impulsive manner. This will also give Mr. Gonzales some time to
    apply for his license and start a practice there, if he so chooses. I would
    recommend a move not occur prior to July, 2013. The family should
    work with the parenting coordinator to plan where the parties will be
    Reply Brief of Appellants                                                              Page 5
    living so that they may coordinate living arrangements within close
    proximity to each other. This will also give Mr. Gonzales time to
    arrange mental health care in the area, get his license, and look for work.
    (18 RR 106) (emphasis added). Appellee argues that the Court can properly consider
    the statement “I would be supportive of the idea of the move” as supporting the
    verdict while deleting out the “to New York” remainder of the sentence. This is
    exactly what the Supreme Court prohibited in City of Keller. 
    Id. She also
    contends that the evidence shows her desire “to move” was not based
    on ill will or an intent to harm Mr. Gonzales (Appellee’s Brief, page 18 (citing 4 RR
    162, 6 RR 35)). There is nothing addressing this issue in the expert’s testimony on
    page 162. Where the expert does address Appellee’s motives, though, it is explicitly
    tied to a move to New York:
    Q. Okay. So do you - - do you think that Marissa’s desire to move to
    New York is prompted by any desire to hurt Mr. Gonzales’s relationship
    with his sons?
    A. No.
    (4 RR 181) (emphasis added). Appellee’s testimony at 6 RR 35 is also explicitly tied
    to a move to New York:
    Q. Okay. Okay. Is it your intent to move to New York - - do you want
    to move to New York so that you can hurt Mr. Gonzales?
    A. No, absolutely not.
    (6 RR 35) (emphasis added).
    Reply Brief of Appellants                                                             Page 6
    In virtually every instance cited by Appellee to support the claim that a generic
    “move” would be in the best interest of the children, the actual testimony was
    explicitly tied to a move to New York and, where not explicitly tied to New York,
    was necessarily tied to such a move by the context of the questions and answers
    surrounding the truncated testimony relied on by Appellee. Under the mandate of
    City of Keller, this is not evidence supporting the jury’s verdict permitting a “move”
    by Appellee to anywhere in Texas.
    Appellee also contends that the evidence establishes that a generic “move”
    from Austin was in the best interest of the children because it would allow the
    children to “get away from” their father (Appellee’s Brief, page 18-20). Again,
    though, this is not an honest review of the record because much of Appellee’s
    expert’s testimony was explicitly based on the assumption that Mr. Gonzales would
    follow his children if Appellee were to move to New York:
    Q. Okay. And what -- what did you find with regarding her desire to
    move with the children to New York that's summarized in this No. 5 of
    your report?
    A. Well, there are a couple of things. One is that this is another one of
    those issues that Mr. Gonzales would go back and forth on. He, on
    numerous occasions, said to me that he would be fine with a move to
    New York, that he could use a fresh start himself, and distance from his
    own family of origin. . . But I think the fact that he was open to it and
    could see some positive things come out of a move for him I think was
    one of the things that I relied on in that particular -- for that particular
    question.
    (4 RR 178-179).
    Reply Brief of Appellants                                                              Page 7
    Q. Well, I can see how maybe it's important or helpful to Marissa, but
    how is it helpful for Mr. Gonzales for Marissa -- for the children to have
    this support structure up in New York?
    A. Well, I'm assuming that if he were to go with them, which is part of
    my understanding is that he was willing to go with them, that then if he
    does have times where he can't handle it and he can't cope and things are
    kind of falling apart, and -- and Marissa is working, which she will most
    likely need to work full-time, then that -- you know, that extended
    family can step in and help Mr. Gonzales, as well.
    (4 RR 183).
    Q. You think it's in the best interest of these boys for mom to be able to move with
    them up to New York?
    A. I do.
    Q. And why is that?
    A. All the things we've already said, added support. There's some
    willingness, at least periodic willingness on the father, in that he will be
    going with them, and so that that – the relationship between Mr.
    Gonzales and his kids can -- can remain and continue to grow. And I
    think she just really needs the support of that extended family to be able
    to sort of handle all of the moving parts of this divorce and their
    co-parenting situation.
    (4 RR 191-192).
    Again, though Appellee spends much of her brief attacking Mr. Gonzales’s
    character and fitness as a parent, the actual evidence presented in this record
    demonstrates that the expert on whom Appellee relies expected Mr. Gonzales to move
    with Appellee (and, according to Appellee, is exactly what happened after Appellee
    abruptly moved to the Dallas area (Appellee’s Brief, page 6, 19)). That is, the expert
    Reply Brief of Appellants                                                              Page 8
    never suggests that the move would be designed to create space between Mr.
    Gonzales and the children because she expected Mr. Gonzales to move as well.
    Appellee’s claim that the evidence supports a move within Texas so that the children
    would have some separation from Mr. Gonzales is wholly without merit.
    The best Appellee can do to support the jury’s verdict is to invite the Court to
    dismember the testimony, removing statements from their context so that pieces of
    the evidence can be contorted to support the jury’s verdict (even down to moving the
    period in a sentence to make the sentence mean something that the author never
    intended). This improper approach to the review of the record illustrates the lack of
    evidence supporting the jury’s decision–that is, that Appellee is reduced to urging the
    Court to rely on improperly dissected evidence demonstrates beyond doubt that there
    is no evidence in the record to support the jury’s verdict. The jury’s verdict on the
    geographic restriction on the children’s domicile is wholly unsupported by the record
    and should be set aside and a new trial ordered on this issue.
    II.     Appellee’s defense of the Trial Court’s division of the contingent fee interest
    is based on a strained reading of the evidence and proceedings before the
    Trial Court
    Appellee’s defense of the Trial Court’s improper division of the contingency
    fee interests is premised on two erroneous propositions. First, Appellee contends that
    the June 19, 2012 letter did not impact the Partnership’s interest in the contingency
    fee cases. To get to this conclusion, Appellee urges the Court to read that letter like
    Reply Brief of Appellants                                                          Page 9
    a lawyer not, as it should, as a reasonable client would. Once the proper lens is
    applied, Appellee’s argument will not stand and, without this foundation, her entire
    argument collapses. Her second proposition is that the Trial Court considered issues
    that were not supported by pleadings, argument, or evidence by considering the
    “winding up” issues instantaneously alongside the division of the community estate
    issues. Again, though, there is nothing in the record to support this post hoc creation
    by Appellee.
    A.       To get to Appellee’s reading of the June 19, 2012 letter to the clients,
    the Court must improperly read the letter through a technical,
    attorney prism
    Appellee claims that because the June 19, 2012 letter does not use the word
    “withdraw” or “terminate” the letter did not have any effect on the Partnership’s
    interest in the cases, claiming “all the letter did [is] notify the clients of the
    dissolution” (Appellee’s Brief, page 30). Once again, though, this claim is wholly
    usupported by a proper review of the entire letter, which provided:
    As of June 1, 2012, Marissa A. Gonzales left our firm to practice as a
    sole practitioner. Furthermore, as of June 1, 2012 Nash J. Gonzales will
    be joining his sister, Ida A. Gonzales who is an Attorney and will
    continue to operate under the name of Gonzales & Gonzales, Attorneys
    at Law.
    Inasmuch as Marissa A. Gonzales was your designated attorney on the
    above matter, we are required by the Rules Regulating the State Bar of
    Texas to inform you that you have the right to choose to have Marissa
    A. Gonzales continue in her new capacity to represent you in this matter,
    or you may have the firm known as Gonzales & Gonzales, Attorneys at
    Law to continue to represent you, in which case the file will be handled
    Reply Brief of Appellants                                                           Page 10
    by Nash J. Gonzales and Ida A. Gonzales or you can choose to retain an
    entirely new attorney.
    We want you to be sure that there is no disadvantage to you as the client,
    from our business separation. The decision as to how the matters we
    have worked on for you and handled, and who handles them in the
    future will be completely yours. Whatever you decide will be
    determinative.
    Please, at your earliest opportunity:
    (1) Check the appropriate statement reflecting your wishes.
    (2) Retain one of the two copies of your directives
    contained herem. for your records.
    (3) Return once copy in the herein provided prepaid
    addressed envelope. To best protect your interest and
    promote continuity of representation, please respond
    quickly.
    [] I wish to continue being represented Nash J. Gonzales and understand
    that his sister Ida A. Gonzales will serve as co-counsel on my case.
    [ ] I wish to continue to be represented by Marissa A. Gonzales. Please
    transfer my file to her new address, all records, files and property in the
    possession of Nash J. Gonzales as quickly as possible.
    [ ] I wish to now be represented by ___________________________
    Name and Address of other Attorney
    By checking the above box and signing below I hereby provide my
    directive and clearly understand who will be the attorney(s) responsible
    for representing me in my case. Should you have any questions or
    concerns, you may contact Marissa A. Gonzales at (512) 394-2979 or
    Nash J. Gonzales at (512) 474-2001.
    (CR 520-521). Contractual communications between an attorney and a client are
    construed from the standpoint of a reasonable person in the client's circumstances.
    Reply Brief of Appellants                                                             Page 11
    Falk & Fish, L.L.P. v. Pinkston's Lawnmower and Equipment, Inc., 
    317 S.W.3d 523
    ,
    528-529 (Tex. App.–Dallas 2010, no pet.) (citing See Restatement (Third) of the Law
    Governing Lawyers § 18 cmt. h). Appellee urges the Court to instead read this letter
    like a lawyer. This the Court should not do.
    From a reasonable client’s perspective, this letter unambiguously advises that
    Appellee has left the firm, that Mr. Gonzales is forming a firm with his sister, and that
    the client needed to chose an attorney to go forward with the case (the attorney “who
    handles them in the future” and “who will be the attorney(s) responsible for
    representing me in my case”) whether it is Mr. Gonzales, Appellee, or an entirely new
    attorney. The client is urged to act quickly to “protect your interest and promote
    continuity of representation” (CR 520).
    This letter plainly communicates to the client that the Gonzales & Gonzales
    partnership is no longer going to be involved in the handling of their case. From the
    client’s perspective, this letter unambiguously indicates that the Partnership is
    withdrawing from the representation whether the word “withdraw” is used or not. In
    addition, the evidence before the Trial Court reflected that these clients were asked
    to and did execute new contractual agreements with their new attorney (CR 523-527).
    And the only testimony before the Trial Court concerning the effect of this letter was
    Mr. Gonzales’s statements to the effect that Appellee had withdrawn from the cases
    (5 RR 107-108).
    Reply Brief of Appellants                                                         Page 12
    Appellee argues that the “the partnership’s right to the contingency fee was not
    terminated prior to the final hearing” presumably meaning the December 2013
    Amended/Corrected Final Decree and that “a client’s retention of a new attorney, if
    any, did not extinguish the partnership’s right to the fee” (Appellee’s Brief, 28 (citing
    CR 679), 32, 34). A reasonable client would not find it acceptable that the
    Partnership would maintain its interest while doing nothing on the case from June
    2012 to December 2013.         And a reasonable person in Olga Maria Gutierrez’s
    position, the client to whom the exemplar letter was addressed and who signed a new
    contract with Mr. Gonzales, would be stunned to learn that she owed two attorney’s
    fees, 33&1/3% to the Partnership under its contract and 33&1/3% to Mr. Gonzales
    under the new contract (CR 514, 520, 526). Presumably, so would Mr. Zapata (CR
    523). No reasonable client, reading the June 19, 2012 letter would understand that
    by retaining a new attorney, as urged by the Partnership in its letter, and signing a
    new contract, the client was subject to a double attorney fee. This is because this
    letter was intended to and did communicate to the clients that the Partnership was
    withdrawing from the representation.
    Though Appellee now wants to claim otherwise, the letters to the clients had
    the effect of ending the Partnership’s interest in the contingency fee files. By
    advising the client that a new attorney was required to handle the matter, the
    Partnership, at a minimum, abandoned the clients resulting in a forfeiture of the
    Reply Brief of Appellants                                                         Page 13
    Partnership’s interest in the cases. Royden v. Ardoin, 
    331 S.W.2d 206
    , 209 (Tex.
    1960). And this outcome was agreed to, explicitly, by Appellee as part of the
    dissolution of the Partnership (CR 517-521). As a result, there was nothing for the
    Trial Court to divide as part of the community estate and its ruling constitutes an
    abuse of discretion.
    B.       There was no “winding up” of the Partnership at the final hearing or,
    if it was considered, the relief requested was denied
    Appellee also claims that the Trial Court considered the issues involved in
    “winding up” the Partnership at the “final hearing” and its distribution of the fee
    interest in the Corrected/Amended Final Decree of Divorce reflects that process
    (Appellee Brief, 28). There were, however, no pleadings supporting the request that
    the Trial Court oversee the winding up of the Partnership. Nor does Appellee point
    to any indication that the “winding up” issue was actually tired (Appellee’s Brief,
    page 28). Holden v. Holden, 
    456 S.W.3d 642
    , 651 (Tex. App.–Tyler 2015, no pet.)
    ("To determine whether an issue was tried by consent, we must review the record not
    for evidence of the issue, but rather for evidence of trial of the issue").
    Moreover, to the extent that any issue related to this theory was considered by
    the Trial Court, the Trial Court’s judgment denied all relief not expressly granted and
    so any request to “wind up” the Partnership’s affairs was rejected (CR 712). Nothing
    in the judgment indicates that the Trial Court did anything other than divide the
    community estate (CR 702-707). Appellee’s new found “winding up” theory is
    Reply Brief of Appellants                                                        Page 14
    unsupported by the pleadings, by the proceedings, by the evidence, and by the
    judgment and should be rejected by the Court.
    PRAYER
    As shown here and in Appellants’ Brief, the Trial Court erred when it rendered
    judgment on the basis of jury verdict that has no evidentiary support. Thus, Appellant
    Nash Gonzales respectfully requests that this Court reverse the Trial Court’s
    December 9, 2013 Amended/Corrected Final Decree of Divorce and remand this
    action to the lower court for retrial of the area in which the children’s residence must
    be confined. The Trial Court also abused its discretion when it sought to divide the
    fees generated by Gonzales & Gonzales, GP’s former inventory of cases, as
    established above and in Appellants’ Brief. Thus, Appellants Nash Gonzales and
    Gonzales & Gonzales, P.C. also request that the Court reverse the Trial Court’s
    division of the community estate, render judgment excluding those fees from the
    community estate, and remanding this matter for further proceedings consistent with
    the Court’s opinion. Alternatively, if the Court concludes that the fee interests are
    properly included in the community estate, Appellants pray that the Court find the
    Trial Court’s division is not based on sufficient evidence, reverse the division, and
    remand this suit for further proceedings. Appellants further pray that the Court award
    them judgment for all costs of appeal and any other and further relief to which they
    are justly entitled.
    Reply Brief of Appellants                                                        Page 15
    Respectfully submitted,
    /s/ Thomas B. Cowart
    Thomas B. Cowart
    Texas Bar No. 00787295
    tom@tcowart.com
    Wasoff & Cowart, P.L.L.C.
    100 North Central Expressway, Suite 901
    Richardson, Texas 75080
    Tel: (214) 692-9700
    Fax: (214) 550-2674
    Attorneys for Appellants Nash Gonzales and
    Gonzales & Gonzales, P.C.
    CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
    Relying on the word-count function in WordPerfect X5, I hereby certify that
    this entire Appellant’s Brief, including the segments of this document which could
    be excluded in calculating the length of a document under Tex. R. App. P. 9.4(i)(1),
    contains 4,550 words.
    /s/ Thomas B. Cowart
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
    I hereby certify that on May 27, 2015 a true and correct copy of this
    Appellants’ Reply Brief has been served on the following via the efile system:
    C. Wilson Shirley III
    wilson@ssjmlaw.com
    Jessica Marcoux Hall
    jessica@ssjmlaw.com
    4330 Gaines Ranch Loop, Suite 150
    Austin, Texas 78735
    512-347-1604
    512-347-1676 Facsimile
    Attorneys for Appellee Marissa Ann Gonzales
    /s/ Thomas B. Cowart
    Thomas B. Cowart
    Reply Brief of Appellants                                                     Page 16