This question has been addressed in 1 Texas court opinion:
COA13 — January 29, 2026
In Ford v. State, a defendant appealed his capital murder conviction, challenging the seizure of evidence from a vehicle registered in his name. The Thirteenth Court of Appeals analyzed whether a party maintains a Fourth Amendment 'reasonable expectation of privacy' in property that has been legally awarded to an ex-spouse. The court held that a final divorce decree serves as a constitutional boundary; because the decree awarded the vehicle to the victim, the defendant's possessory and privacy interests were extinguished. As a result, the defendant lacked standing to challenge the search, regardless of whether the title had been formally transferred.
Litigation Takeaway
“A final divorce decree is a powerful tool that immediately terminates a spouse's privacy rights in awarded property. Practitioners should draft decrees with extreme specificity—including VINs and clear divestiture clauses—to ensure that an ex-spouse cannot later claim constitutional protections to block the discovery of evidence or the enforcement of property rights.”