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Divorce Decree Enforcement Cannot Re-Divide Property | Cagney-Reeves v. Reeves (2026)

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

Bernadette Cagney-Reeves v. Eric Michael Reeves, 14-25-00628-CV, June 30, 2026.

On appeal from 246th District Court, Harris County, Texas

Synopsis

A post-divorce enforcement motion under Texas Family Code sections 9.001, 9.002, and 9.007 cannot be used to unwind a completed sale of marital property and revest title in one former spouse. Relief declaring the deed void and re-transferring the home would change the property division in the decree, which Chapter 9 does not permit.

Relevance to Family Law

This opinion is a useful boundary case for Texas family lawyers handling post-decree property disputes. It reinforces that Chapter 9 enforcement is limited to implementing or clarifying the division actually made in the decree; it is not a vehicle to litigate fraud, forgery, coercion, or title-based claims in a way that effectively re-divides property. For family litigators, the case matters most in post-divorce real-property fights: if the requested remedy would undo a sale, reallocate ownership, or otherwise alter the decree’s economic outcome, the claim likely falls outside enforceable Chapter 9 relief and must be analyzed through some other procedural path—if one exists at all.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The divorce decree required the parties to sell the marital residence. The decree specified core implementation terms: the property was to be listed with a duly licensed broker with sales experience in the area, the parties would agree on price or else the realtor would set it, and the net proceeds would be split 60% to Bernadette Cagney-Reeves and 40% to Eric Michael Reeves.

Roughly four years after the residence had been sold, Bernadette Cagney-Reeves, acting pro se, filed multiple motions attacking various aspects of the divorce case. After special exceptions were sustained and she failed to replead, the trial court dismissed those pleadings. She then filed a motion for judicial review and enforcement of the divorce decree, alleging that the warranty deed conveying the home had been executed without her consent, that signatures on the deed were forged, and that she had been coerced into aspects of the listing process while medically incapacitated. She asked the trial court to enforce the decree by declaring the deed null and void and ordering the property re-transferred into her name.

At the hearing, the trial court focused on the decree’s actual terms governing the sale and asked what provision required enforcement or clarification. The movant asserted misconduct surrounding the listing agreement, deed execution, and sales process, and also complained that the broker lacked the area-specific experience required by the decree. But she identified no competent witness support for those allegations. The materials attached to her motion included the warranty deed, a police report and email correspondence with a detective regarding alleged forgery, and a business printout concerning the purchaser. Those materials did not establish forgery; in fact, the detective reported that the district attorney declined to proceed and that investigators had not determined which documents, if any, were forged or who committed any forgery. The trial court denied the enforcement motion with prejudice, and the Fourteenth Court of Appeals affirmed.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

The court relied primarily on the post-divorce enforcement provisions in Chapter 9 of the Texas Family Code:

The court also cited Morrison v. Morrison, 729 S.W.3d 328, 332 (Tex. 2026) for the principle that Chapter 9 enforcement authority does not permit a court to substantively revise the original property division.

On standard of review, the court applied the abuse-of-discretion framework from Woody v. Woody, 429 S.W.3d 792, 797 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2014, no pet.).

As to error preservation and appellate briefing, the court relied on:

The court also reiterated that pro se litigants are held to the same procedural standards as licensed counsel, citing Harrison v. Reiner, 607 S.W.3d 450, 457 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2020, pet. denied) and Mansfield State Bank v. Cohn, 573 S.W.2d 181, 185 (Tex. 1978).

Application

The court treated the case as an enforcement-boundary problem rather than as an abstract complaint about alleged wrongdoing in the sale process. The decree required the house to be sold and set out the mechanism for doing so, including broker qualifications, pricing, and division of proceeds. The movant did not identify an unperformed decree obligation that needed coercive enforcement, nor a decree ambiguity requiring clarification. Instead, she asked the court to set aside the deed and return the property to her alone.

That requested remedy was fatal to the Chapter 9 theory. Undoing the conveyance and revesting title in one former spouse would not merely implement the decree; it would reverse the decree’s contemplated disposition of the asset. The decree called for sale and division of proceeds, not restoration of sole ownership in either party. So even apart from the evidentiary weakness, the remedy sought had the hallmarks of a prohibited re-division.

The evidentiary record compounded the problem. At hearing, the movant asserted forgery, coercion, incapacity, and broker noncompliance, but she had no witnesses to substantiate those points. The attached police-related materials did not corroborate forgery and, if anything, reflected an unresolved accusation that law enforcement had not been able to prove. On that record, the trial court had no basis to conclude that any decree term required enforcement relief, much less the extraordinary relief of invalidating a deed years after closing.

The appellate court also rejected complaints that the trial court excluded evidence or denied discovery. Those issues were not tied to preserved objections or rulings in the record and were therefore unavailable for appellate review.

Holding

The Fourteenth Court of Appeals held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion to enforce. A Chapter 9 enforcement proceeding may be used only to implement or clarify the property division made in the decree; it cannot be used to declare a deed void and re-transfer the marital home to one former spouse because that relief would alter the original division of property.

The court further held that the movant failed to present evidence supporting her allegations of forgery or demonstrating that any decree provision required enforcement assistance or clarification. On this record, denial of the enforcement motion was within the trial court’s discretion.

Finally, the court held that complaints regarding exclusion of evidence and denial of discovery were not preserved because the appellant did not show where those complaints were presented to the trial court and ruled upon.

Practical Application

For practitioners, this case is a strong reminder to frame post-decree claims by remedy first, statute second. If your client wants title restored, a sale unwound, or ownership shifted from the decree’s operative structure, Chapter 9 is likely the wrong vehicle because the relief itself suggests an impermissible modification of the property division. Family lawyers should analyze whether the decree already allocated ownership and sale mechanics with sufficient finality that any attempt to reverse a completed transfer would necessarily change the economic division rather than enforce it.

The case also underscores the distinction between implementation failures and validity attacks. If one spouse refuses to sign a deed required by the decree, fails to cooperate with listing, blocks closing, or withholds sale proceeds, those are classic enforcement scenarios. By contrast, alleging that a completed deed was forged or that a broker-selection process was tainted may involve fact-intensive claims that do not fit neatly within Chapter 9—especially when the requested relief is rescission-like and would put the property back into one party’s name.

Strategically, litigators should also pay attention to record-building. Even if a claim is theoretically cognizable, unsupported accusations of forgery, coercion, or incapacity will not carry an enforcement motion. The hearing record in this case illustrates a common post-decree failure: serious allegations paired with no live witnesses, no expert handwriting evidence, no authenticated business records, and no preserved procedural complaints. When seeking post-divorce relief tied to real property, practitioners should expect trial and appellate courts to scrutinize both the legal fit of the remedy and the evidentiary foundation.

Finally, this opinion is useful in defending against overreaching enforcement motions. When the opposing party styles a pleading as “enforcement” but seeks to undo the decree’s consummated property disposition, cite sections 9.002 and 9.007 early and often. The best response may be that, as pleaded, the requested relief is jurisdictionally or statutorily unavailable because it changes the division rather than enforces it.

Checklists

Evaluate Whether Chapter 9 Is the Correct Vehicle

Draft an Enforcement Motion That Survives Scrutiny

Build the Evidentiary Record

Preserve Error for Appeal

Defend Against an Overbroad Enforcement Motion

Citation

Bernadette Cagney-Reeves v. Eric Michael Reeves, No. 14-25-00628-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] June 30, 2026, no pet. h.) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

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