When a divorce involves a business, two questions usually drive the case: what interest, if any, belongs to the community estate, and what that interest is worth. The answer to those questions often shapes who keeps the business and on what terms.
But things can become complicated quickly. A business interest may involve ownership shares, partnership rights, stock options, a professional practice, or a company built during the marriage. The value may also depend on factors that are easy to miss at the outset, including how the business is characterized, what valuation method fits the asset, and how much of the business’s value is tied to the owner personally.
At Law Offices of Mark M. Childress, PLLC, we handle high-asset divorce cases involving closely held businesses and other complex property issues. We asked Rick J. Mitchell, a Partner in our firm who focuses on these matters, to explain how business interests are analyzed in Texas divorce cases and where early mistakes can affect the outcome.
What Counts as a Divisible Business Interest
A business interest is rarely just one thing. It can be equity, ownership shares, stock options, a partnership stake, or an entire company built over the course of the marriage.
As Rick puts it:
"One of the issues we typically see in high-net-worth divorce cases is how to handle the division of business interests. Those interests can take the form of equity in the business, like stock options and partnership agreements, and they can also be the division of an entire business that grew out of an entrepreneurship or a professional practice built during the marriage."
The form the interest takes shapes how it gets valued and what, if anything, the other spouse can claim.
Characterization Comes Before Valuation
Before anyone can argue about what a business is worth for the sake of property division, the threshold question is what part of that business interest is actually part of the community estate.
In Texas, property possessed during marriage is generally presumed to be community property, but that does not end the analysis. A business may have been started before marriage, grown during marriage, or increased in value through one spouse's efforts over time. Some interests are separate property, some are community, and a separate-property business can still owe the community estate for growth that came from the owner's work during the marriage.
That is why characterization has to be addressed early. The date the business was formed, the ownership documents, the source of capital, the structure of compensation, and the role each spouse played can all affect what is subject to division.
Only after that groundwork is done does valuation become meaningful. Otherwise, the parties may spend time and money fighting over a number before resolving what interest is even on the table.
Valuation Comes Before Division
Courts rarely want two divorced spouses running a business together, so one spouse usually buys the other out. The valuation directly determines the size of that buyout, which is why getting the number right is critical.
"The first step in dividing the interest is to determine its value to the community estate. That is done through a business valuation," Rick explains. "We have several experts we use in this process, each one with expertise in the field or industry we are valuing."
Matching the expert to the industry is not a formality. A practice, a manufacturing company, and a professional services firm each carry value in different places, and a generalist appraiser can miss what a specialist would catch.
The Goodwill Issue That Changes the Math
This is where many cases are won or lost, and where the early valuation often goes wrong. Goodwill is the intangible value of a business beyond its hard assets, and Texas law splits it in two. Enterprise goodwill belongs to the business itself and would survive the owner's departure, so it is community property subject to division. Personal goodwill is tied to the individual's own skill, reputation, and relationships, and Texas treats it as separate property that cannot be divided.
That line can swing the divisible value dramatically. Rick describes a case in progress:
"I have a case right now in which a dental practice is basically run entirely by my client. Without her, the practice is not viable. Her goodwill component will be close to 100%, which will effectively yield no value to the community estate."
He calls this one of the most common and costly oversights:
"The goodwill effect on the business is a common oversight in the initial evaluation of a case. It is important for each spouse, whether you own the business or are the partner in the relationship, because it is a crucial factor in determining what exactly we are going to be litigating."
For the spouse who built the business, the stakes are personal:
"If you are the owner of a small business, your personal goodwill and the equity that derives from your hard work should be taken into account. It is not fair or equitable to discount how your work growing a business has affected its value, should you find yourself in a divorce."
Three Ways to Value a Business, and Why the Method Matters
Appraisers generally rely on three approaches.
- The asset approach values the company based on its assets and liabilities.
- The market approach compares it to similar businesses that have sold.
- The income approach projects future earnings and converts them to present value.
The method chosen, and the assumptions inside it, can produce very different numbers for the same company.
"Understanding the different approaches for valuing a business is crucial," Rick says. "You need an attorney who can understand and argue whether an asset, market, or income approach is the most beneficial value for your business. It's all in the details."
That fluency is not accidental for him. With a background in economics, he reads the data from valuation experts closely rather than taking their conclusions at face value, which is often what separates a defensible number from one that quietly costs a client.
Why Rushing to a Number Works Against You
There is real pressure in a divorce to get a figure fast and start planning around it. Rick sees that instinct as a trap.
"Today, there is a rush to estimate the value of a business and other complex assets and then overload the client with expectations too early in the process," he says. "Divorce is a stressful situation, and people want an immediate perspective. But we have to gather all the facts before we start discussing what I call a 'true and objective settlement range.'"
Talk to Us Before the Numbers Get Locked In
If you own a business or share a marriage with significant or complex assets, the way your case is built in its early stages will shape what you walk away with. At Law Offices of Mark M. Childress, PLLC, our team works with the right valuation experts to make sure your business is characterized and valued correctly from the start.
If you have questions about valuing and dividing a business or other high-value assets during divorce, we can help. Call (817) 497-8148 or contact us online to talk through your situation.
About Rick J. Mitchell
Rick J. Mitchell is a Partner at Law Offices of Mark M. Childress, PLLC, where he handles high-asset and complex property divorce cases. He studied economics before going into law, and he uses that background to read valuation reports closely and build a strategy around how businesses, equity, and goodwill are valued. Rick is also trained in collaborative divorce, an approach that favors thorough, well-supported numbers over fast estimates.