Representing families throughout Magnolia, Montgomery, and western Montgomery County in divorce, high-asset divorce, child custody, child support, property division, and all family law matters. Every case is heard in Conroe — where we appear regularly.
Magnolia is one of the fastest-growing communities in Montgomery County — a community of professionals, business owners, and families with significant financial lives built around the area’s rapid development. Neighboring Montgomery, Texas is one of the oldest cities in the state, founded in 1837 and home to landowners, ranchers, and families with deep ties to the land. Both communities are served by the same three Conroe courts, and both are part of the same legal landscape we navigate every day.
All family law cases from Magnolia and Montgomery are heard in Conroe at the Montgomery County courthouse — in the 418th, 410th, or County Court at Law No. 3. Our office is in downtown Conroe, steps from those courts.
Marital estates in this area frequently include rural acreage, Lake Conroe waterfront property, ranches, business interests, retirement accounts, and executive compensation — all of which require careful legal strategy under Texas community property law. We represent families in divorce, child custody, child support, property division, and prenuptial agreements.
All Magnolia and Montgomery divorce and family law cases are filed and heard at the Montgomery County courthouse in Conroe. Our office is steps from that courthouse — and we appear regularly in all three courts.
Western Montgomery County marital estates often include rural land, lake property, business interests, retirement accounts, and agricultural operations. Here is how Texas law approaches each.
Retirement accounts accumulated during the marriage are generally community property in Texas — but they cannot simply be split at the bank. Dividing a 401(k), 403(b), or pension requires a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO) — a separate court order sent directly to the plan administrator. Without a QDRO, the plan cannot legally divide the account. IRAs require a different process. Early withdrawal triggers taxes and a 10% penalty.
Divorces in Montgomery frequently involve rural acreage, ranches, timberland, and agricultural operations. Land purchased during the marriage with community funds is community property, subject to just and right division. Separate property claims — including pre-marital land or inherited acreage — require proof. Livestock, equipment, and agricultural leases add complexity.
Lake Conroe waterfront property, primary residences, investment properties, and vacation homes purchased during the marriage are community property. Waterfront property values have appreciated significantly in recent years, making accurate valuation and strategic division essential. We account for all real property in the marital estate.
If a business formed or grew during the marriage, it may be partially or fully community property. Texas courts rarely force a sale — instead awarding the business to one spouse with other marital assets used to equalize the division. Business valuation and characterization of separate versus community interest are the key contested areas.
Vehicles — including trucks, trailers, ATVs, boats, luxury vehicles, and heavy equipment — are marital assets when purchased with community funds. In rural western Montgomery County estates, equipment and vehicles often represent significant value that is overlooked in settlement negotiations.
For residents entering a marriage with inherited land, a family ranch, a business interest, or significant separate property, a prenuptial agreement is one of the most practical planning tools available. A properly drafted Texas prenuptial agreement defines what remains separate property, limits spousal maintenance claims, and protects generational assets.
Yes — in most cases. Retirement accounts accumulated during the marriage are community property in Texas and subject to division. But the process is more complicated than dividing a bank account, and getting it wrong has real financial consequences.
For 401(k)s, 403(b)s, and pensions, a separate court order called a Qualified Domestic Relations Order — a QDRO — is required. The QDRO is sent directly to the retirement plan administrator and instructs them how to divide the account. Without a QDRO, the plan administrator cannot legally divide the account between spouses.
IRAs are different — they are divided through a process called a transfer incident to divorce, which has its own requirements with the IRA custodian.
We make sure your share of every retirement account is properly identified, documented, and protected — so that what is awarded on paper actually reaches you.
Texas requires a mandatory 60-day waiting period from filing. Uncontested divorces often close shortly after. High-asset and contested divorces — particularly those involving rural land, lake property, agricultural operations, business interests, and retirement accounts — typically take six months to over a year.
Child custody cases for Magnolia and Montgomery families are heard in Conroe at the Montgomery County courts. Texas applies the best interest of the child standard — evaluating each parent’s involvement, home stability, and the child’s existing relationships. Magnolia ISD and Montgomery ISD boundaries and rural living arrangements are often meaningful factors in local custody cases.
Texas child support is calculated using statutory guideline percentages of the paying parent’s net monthly resources. Courts may order above-guideline support when the child’s proven needs exceed what the guidelines provide. Support can be established, modified when circumstances change, and enforced through contempt when a parent fails to pay.
Texas law gives the noncustodial parent two possession schedule options. Most orders default to the Standard Possession Order — but the Expanded SPO gives significantly more time and must be affirmatively elected in writing. This is one of the most frequently missed details in Texas custody cases.
The default possession schedule when parents live within 100 miles of each other. Transfers occur at 6:00 PM on the first day of possession.
The Expanded SPO gives the noncustodial parent significantly more time — transfers begin at school dismissal, not 6:00 PM. Must be elected in writing.
The Expanded SPO does not apply automatically. The noncustodial parent must make a written election at the time of the final order or within 30 days of the order being signed. Missing this window means defaulting to the Standard SPO.
When parents live more than 100 miles apart, a different possession schedule applies. The noncustodial parent receives:
Texas child support is calculated using statutory guideline percentages of the paying parent’s monthly net resources under Texas Family Code §154.125. Net resources are defined under TFC §154.062 and include wages, salary, commissions, overtime, self-employment income, rental income, and other sources — after deductions for Social Security taxes, federal income tax, union dues, and the cost of health insurance for the child.
The guidelines apply to the first $9,200 in monthly net resources. Above that threshold, courts may order additional support based on the child’s proven needs. Courts can also deviate from guidelines when circumstances justify it.
Child support does not end automatically. In Texas, support obligations generally continue until the child turns 18 or graduates from high school — whichever is later. If your income changes significantly, you must file a petition to modify rather than simply stopping payments.
Our office is in Conroe — the same courthouse where your case is filed and decided. We appear regularly in the 418th, 410th, and CCL3. That familiarity is not a marketing claim — it is a daily reality of our practice.
Ranches, acreage, Lake Conroe waterfront property, livestock, equipment, and agricultural operations — western Montgomery County estates require an attorney who understands how Texas law treats these assets and how to value and divide them correctly.
From the Standard Possession Order to the Expanded SPO election, Magnolia and Montgomery ISD enrollment considerations, geographic restrictions, and modification petitions — we build custody strategies around your child’s actual life and your parental rights.
Family law is not a sideline for us. It is what we do — which means focused expertise, not a generalist trying to manage a divorce alongside real estate closings and business filings.
Litigation is sometimes necessary — but rarely the most efficient path. We give you a candid assessment of your options, likely outcomes, and costs before you commit to a strategy.
Flat-fee uncontested divorce through 2500Divorce.com for qualifying cases. Transparent hourly billing for contested matters. Free consultation before you commit.
Not every divorce in Magnolia or Montgomery is contested. If you and your spouse have reached full agreement on property, children, and support, you may qualify for our flat-fee, attorney-guided divorce service through 2500Divorce.com. A licensed attorney handles every step from filing through final decree at a predictable flat fee. Free consultation to determine eligibility.
Our office is in Conroe — minutes from Magnolia and Montgomery and steps from the Montgomery County courthouse where your case will be decided. Free consultations available for all family law matters.
(713) 352-6900Where cases are filed and decided — and why local court knowledge matters.
Both Magnolia and Montgomery are located in Montgomery County, Texas. All divorce and family law cases are filed and heard at the Montgomery County courthouse in Conroe — in the 418th Judicial District Court, the 410th Judicial District Court, or County Court at Law No. 3, depending on case assignment. Our firm appears regularly in all three courts.
Yes — each court has its own local procedures, scheduling preferences, and approach to case management. Knowing those distinctions helps set realistic expectations, prepare the right materials at the right time, and avoid procedural issues that delay resolution. It is one of the concrete advantages of working with a firm that appears in these courts regularly rather than one that handles Montgomery County cases only occasionally.
How Texas divorce works and what to expect in Montgomery County courts.
Texas requires a mandatory 60-day waiting period from the date of filing. From there, timeline depends on whether the case is contested:
High-asset divorces involving rural land, agricultural operations, lake property, or business valuation typically take longer due to the discovery required to fully identify and value the marital estate.
Yes. Property acquired during the marriage is generally community property in Texas, subject to division in a just and right manner — not automatically 50/50. Separate property — owned before marriage, received as a gift, or inherited — is not subject to division. The claiming spouse bears the full burden of proof. In this area, this often arises with inherited land or family ranches. Community contributions to separate property can create reimbursement claims.
How 401(k)s, 403(b)s, pensions, and IRAs are divided — and why most people have never heard of a QDRO until they need one.
Yes — the portion accumulated during the marriage is generally community property. But dividing it requires a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO) — a separate court order sent to the plan administrator. Without one, the administrator cannot legally divide the account.
How Texas divides rural land, lake property, ranches, businesses, and other complex assets in a western Montgomery County divorce.
Real property purchased during the marriage with community funds is community property, subject to just and right division. In this area, that frequently includes rural acreage, ranches, Lake Conroe waterfront property, and investment land. Common outcomes include one spouse buying out the other’s equity, a sale with proceeds divided, or a deferred sale.
If one spouse owned the property before marriage, received it as a gift, or inherited it, it may be separate property — but that spouse must prove it. Community contributions to the mortgage or improvements on separate property can create reimbursement claims.
Agricultural operations present some of the most complex property division issues in Texas family law. Key questions include characterization (was the ranch separate or community property?), valuation (what is the operation worth, including land, improvements, livestock, equipment, and leases?), and division (Texas courts rarely force a sale — the operation is typically awarded to one spouse with equivalent marital assets used to offset the other).
Community contributions — labor, income, mortgage payments, improvements — to a separate-property ranch can create reimbursement claims even when the land itself is separate property.
How Montgomery County courts decide custody for Magnolia and Montgomery families.
Montgomery County family courts apply the best interest of the child standard under TFC §153.002. Courts evaluate each parent’s day-to-day involvement, stability of each home environment, the child’s existing relationships with siblings and family, each parent’s physical and mental health, any history of family violence or substance abuse, each parent’s willingness to support the child’s relationship with the other parent, and — for children 12 and older — the child’s expressed preference. Texas law is gender-neutral.
Montgomery County courts commonly restrict the child’s primary residence to Montgomery County and contiguous counties — Harris, Walker, San Jacinto, Waller, and Grimes. This prevents the primary parent from relocating the child outside that area without a court modification order or the other parent’s written consent. Violating a geographic restriction is grounds for an enforcement action and can support a modification petition.
The difference between the Standard and Expanded Possession Order — and why the election timing matters.
The Expanded Standard Possession Order (ESPO) under TFC §153.317 gives the noncustodial parent significantly more time. The key difference is transfer timing: the Standard SPO begins Friday at 6:00 PM; the Expanded SPO begins at school dismissal Friday and ends when school resumes Monday morning. Summer possession may extend to 42 days. The Expanded SPO must be elected in writing at or within 30 days of the final order under TFC §153.3171 — it does not apply automatically.
How the guidelines work, when courts deviate, and what happens when circumstances change.
Texas child support is calculated under TFC §154.125 using guideline percentages: 1 child — 20%; 2 children — 25%; 3 children — 30%; 4 children — 35%; 5 or more — 40%. Net resources are defined under TFC §154.062 and include wages, salary, commissions, overtime, self-employment income, and other sources after certain deductions. Guidelines apply to the first $9,200 in monthly net resources.
Self-employment income — including income from ranches, agricultural operations, and small businesses — is included in net resources under TFC §154.062. However, calculating net resources for a self-employed parent is more complex than for a salaried employee. Business expenses, depreciation, and owner distributions all affect the calculation. Courts scrutinize self-employment income carefully, and accurate documentation of income and expenses is critical from the start.
Child support in Texas typically ends when the child turns 18 or graduates from high school — whichever occurs later. If the child has a physical or mental disability requiring ongoing support, the obligation may continue beyond age 18 under TFC §154.302. Support does not end automatically — the paying parent may need to formally terminate the obligation through the court to stop wage withholding.
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Attorney advertising. Fritz and Phillips, PC is a Texas law firm. The information on this website is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice or establish an attorney-client relationship. Prior results do not guarantee similar outcomes. Jessica Fritz (TX Bar 2008) and Keith Phillips (TX Bar 2016) are the attorneys responsible for this content.