News & Commentary

TikTok Stars Kristy & Desmond Scott Divorce: Texas Business Assets at Stake

Kristy Scott filed for divorce Dec 30, 2025 from husband Desmond after 11 years. The TikTok couple with 16M followers co-owns production company, raising Texas property division questions.

By Antonio G. Jimenez, Esq.Texas8 min read

What Happened

Kristy Scott filed for divorce from her husband Desmond Scott on December 30, 2025, ending their 11-year marriage amid allegations of infidelity, according to TMZ. The couple, known as 'The Scotts' to their 16 million TikTok followers, built a social media empire together and co-own production company Meant To Be Films, creating significant business assets that Texas courts will need to divide alongside custody arrangements for their two sons.

Key FactsDetails
What happenedKristy Scott filed for divorce citing alleged infidelity
WhenDecember 30, 2025
WhereTexas (jurisdiction based on couple's residence)
Who's affected16 million TikTok followers, two minor sons, joint business interests
Key statuteTex. Fam. Code § 7.001 (community property division)
ImpactHigh-value business assets and social media IP must be divided

Why This Matters Legally

This divorce raises critical questions about how Texas courts divide modern digital assets including social media accounts, intellectual property rights, and production companies built during marriage. Under Tex. Fam. Code § 3.002, property acquired during marriage is presumed community property subject to equitable division, regardless of which spouse's name appears on business documents or social media accounts. The couple's production company Meant To Be Films represents a particularly complex asset because it generates income from their joint personal brand, making valuation and division exceptionally difficult.

Texas courts must determine whether the @TheScotts TikTok account (16 million followers) constitutes divisible marital property or whether follower relationships belong to individual spouses. Recent Texas appellate decisions have treated social media accounts with commercial value as business assets subject to division, particularly when both spouses contributed content during marriage. The court will likely appoint a business valuator to assess Meant To Be Films' fair market value, considering factors like subscriber counts, advertising revenue, brand partnerships, and intellectual property portfolios.

Allegations of infidelity, while potentially relevant to child custody determinations under Tex. Fam. Code § 153.002, generally do not affect property division in Texas. Texas abolished fault-based property division in 1970, meaning Kristy's infidelity claims against Desmond will not entitle her to a larger share of community assets unless she proves he dissipated marital funds on the extramarital relationship.

How Texas Law Handles This

Texas follows a community property system where courts divide marital assets in a "just and right" manner under Tex. Fam. Code § 7.001. This does not require a 50/50 split but considers factors including each spouse's earning capacity, education, physical condition, ages of children, and separate property holdings. For the Scotts' production company, the court must first characterize whether Meant To Be Films is community property (built during marriage with marital effort) or separate property (owned before marriage or acquired by gift/inheritance).

Because the couple married in 2014 and likely built their social media empire after that date, Meant To Be Films is presumptively community property. Under Tex. Fam. Code § 3.003, the spouse claiming separate property bears the burden of proving it with clear and convincing evidence. The court has three primary options for dividing the business:

  1. Buyout: One spouse purchases the other's community interest at fair market value
  2. Co-ownership: Both spouses retain ownership interests (rarely used for operating businesses)
  3. Sale: The business is sold and proceeds divided

Texas courts strongly prefer buyouts for operating businesses where one spouse actively manages operations. If Desmond primarily managed Meant To Be Films' day-to-day operations, the court will likely award him the business and require him to pay Kristy her share of its value through cash payments, retirement account transfers, or offsetting other assets.

For child custody, Texas applies a "best interest of the child" standard under Tex. Fam. Code § 153.002. The court presumes joint managing conservatorship is in children's best interest unless evidence shows otherwise. Factors include each parent's ability to provide stability, past caregiving roles, work schedules, and any history of family violence. Kristy's infidelity allegations against Desmond could become relevant only if she proves the conduct directly endangered the children's physical or emotional welfare.

Child support follows statutory guidelines under Tex. Fam. Code § 154.125, calculated as a percentage of the paying parent's net resources: 20% for one child, 25% for two children. For high-income parents like the Scotts, support is calculated on the first $9,200 monthly net resources (2025 cap), though courts may order additional support for proven expenses exceeding this amount.

Practical Takeaways

  1. Document business contributions immediately: Kristy should gather evidence of her creative input, content creation, business development, and brand-building efforts for Meant To Be Films. Text messages, emails, social media analytics showing her content performance, and testimony from business partners can prove her contributions justify a larger share of business value.

  2. Obtain forensic business valuation: Both spouses need independent business appraisals valuing Meant To Be Films using income, market, and asset-based approaches. The valuator must assess subscriber counts, advertising contracts, intellectual property rights, equipment, and goodwill. Expect valuations to range from 2-5x annual revenue for digital media companies.

  3. Preserve social media evidence carefully: Do not delete TikTok videos, Instagram posts, or business communications. Texas courts can sanction parties who destroy evidence under Tex. R. Civ. P. 215. Download complete archives of all social accounts before either spouse can alter or remove content.

  4. Address brand identity rights early: Negotiate whether either spouse can continue using "The Scotts" branding post-divorce. The production company name and associated trademarks may constitute valuable intellectual property requiring separate valuation and division.

  5. Protect children's privacy during proceedings: Texas courts can issue protective orders limiting public disclosure of custody evaluations and children's information under Tex. Fam. Code § 153.073. Request these protections early given the family's 16-million-person public following.

  6. Plan for ongoing business relationships: If both spouses retain ownership interests in Meant To Be Films, negotiate detailed operating agreements addressing decision-making authority, profit distributions, buyout provisions, and dispute resolution to avoid future litigation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can Kristy get a larger property share because Desmond allegedly cheated?

No, Texas does not award larger property shares based on adultery under current law. Tex. Fam. Code § 7.001 requires "just and right" division considering factors like earning capacity and child custody, but fault is not listed. Kristy could receive more assets only if she proves Desmond spent significant marital funds on the affair, constituting community property waste.

Who owns the @TheScotts TikTok account with 16 million followers?

Texas courts treat commercially valuable social media accounts as divisible community property when both spouses contributed content during marriage. The account likely belongs to both spouses as community property subject to division. The court will consider who created the account, who generated content, and who managed business relationships when dividing this asset.

How are production company assets divided in Texas divorces?

Texas courts first determine if the business is community property (acquired during marriage) or separate property. If community, the court typically awards the business to the managing spouse and requires a buyout payment to the other spouse based on fair market value determined by business appraisers, often using 2-5x annual revenue multiples for media companies.

Will infidelity allegations affect custody of their two sons?

Infidelity alone does not disqualify a parent from custody in Texas. Tex. Fam. Code § 153.002 focuses on the child's best interest, considering factors like stability, caregiving history, and safety. Kristy must prove Desmond's alleged conduct directly endangered the children's welfare for it to impact custody. Otherwise, Texas presumes joint managing conservatorship is appropriate.

Can they continue working together in Meant To Be Films after divorce?

Yes, though it is uncommon and requires detailed operating agreements. Most Texas divorce decrees award the business to one spouse who buys out the other's interest. Continued co-ownership requires clear terms addressing decision-making, profit splits, exit provisions, and dispute resolution to prevent future conflicts requiring court intervention.

Next Steps for High-Asset Texas Divorces

Couples with significant business interests, intellectual property, or social media assets should consult Texas family law attorneys experienced in complex property division before filing. Early steps include freezing business accounts, obtaining financial forensics, and securing evidence of each spouse's contributions to business value.

Texas attorneys can negotiate prenuptial agreements addressing social media ownership, business interests, and brand rights before marriage, or postnuptial agreements during marriage. These agreements provide clarity and avoid costly litigation when relationships end.


This article discusses recent news and provides general legal commentary. It does not constitute legal advice. Every case is unique. Consult a qualified family law attorney for advice specific to your situation.

Key Questions

Can Kristy get a larger property share because Desmond allegedly cheated?

No, Texas does not award larger property shares based on adultery under current law. Tex. Fam. Code § 7.001 requires "just and right" division considering factors like earning capacity and child custody, but fault is not listed. Kristy could receive more assets only if she proves Desmond spent significant marital funds on the affair, constituting community property waste.

Who owns the @TheScotts TikTok account with 16 million followers?

Texas courts treat commercially valuable social media accounts as divisible community property when both spouses contributed content during marriage. The account likely belongs to both spouses as community property subject to division. The court will consider who created the account, who generated content, and who managed business relationships when dividing this asset.

How are production company assets divided in Texas divorces?

Texas courts first determine if the business is community property (acquired during marriage) or separate property. If community, the court typically awards the business to the managing spouse and requires a buyout payment to the other spouse based on fair market value determined by business appraisers, often using 2-5x annual revenue multiples for media companies.

Will infidelity allegations affect custody of their two sons?

Infidelity alone does not disqualify a parent from custody in Texas. Tex. Fam. Code § 153.002 focuses on the child's best interest, considering factors like stability, caregiving history, and safety. Kristy must prove Desmond's alleged conduct directly endangered the children's welfare for it to impact custody. Otherwise, Texas presumes joint managing conservatorship is appropriate.

Can they continue working together in Meant To Be Films after divorce?

Yes, though it is uncommon and requires detailed operating agreements. Most Texas divorce decrees award the business to one spouse who buys out the other's interest. Continued co-ownership requires clear terms addressing decision-making, profit splits, exit provisions, and dispute resolution to prevent future conflicts requiring court intervention.

Written By

Antonio G. Jimenez, Esq.

Florida Bar No. 21022 | Covering Texas divorce law