Bankston v. Scott

216 S.W.2d 291, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 926
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 23, 1948
DocketNo. 12034.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 216 S.W.2d 291 (Bankston v. Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bankston v. Scott, 216 S.W.2d 291, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 926 (Tex. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

CODY, Justice..

On December 8, 1946, the County Court of Walker County, sitting in matters probate, ordered Alex Scott, administrator, with the will annexed, of the estate of W. T. (Tom) Bankston, deceased, to deliver to appellee Sadie -Bailes certain securities totalling in value the sum of $14,496.00, which securities were deposited in two Huntsville banks. Thereupon, in proper time, appellant, Isla Loyd Bankston, .alleging that she was the wife of Tom Bankston, deceased, appealed to the District Court of Walker County, where -she filed -her petition attacking the order which directed the delivery to appellee’ Sadie-Bailes of the aforesaid property of the value, as aforesaid, of $14,496.00.

The appellees filed a plea in abatement to appellant’s petition, and a motion to dismiss the appeal to the district court, upon the ground that appellant was not the wife of Tom Bankston, deceased; and had no interest in his estate, etc.; and, subject to said plea and motion, answered appellant’s petition. The court announced that he would take the plea in abatement, and the motion to dismiss, along with the case. At the conclusion of the evidence, appellant moved for a directed verdict, which motion was by the court overruled. The case was submitted to the jury upon a single special issue, and in answering said special issue the jury' found that, at the time of 'the death-of the deceased, on the 22nd of November, 1946, appellant was not the lawful wife of said deceased.

*292 Then, on February 23, 1948, the court entered judgment on the jury’s said verdict, sustaining appellees’ plea in abatement, and dismissed the appeal. Thereafter, on February 27, 1948, appellant filed her motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, which was refused, and thereafter her motion for new trial was filed, presented and, refused.

Appellant predicates her appeal upon four points, the first two of which are to the effect that the court should have found that the evidence established, as a matter of law, that appellant and the deceased were married at the date of his death, and said points 1 and 2 are stated by appellant substantially as follows:

I. The evidence having conclusively established a ceremonial marriage,, the fact that the parties agreed to keep the marriage a secret, and live apart, and the further fact that appellant transacted her business in her maiden name cannot have the effect of impairing the marriage status which was so conclusively proved to.exist.

II. The fact that appellant was unable to produce the official record of her marriage does not refute the evidence that such marriage was consummated, as shown by a witness to the ceremony.

Appellant relies solely upon the evidence which she produced upon the trial of a ceremonial marriage performed at Cham-blee, Georgia, in 1918, to establish the existence of a marriage between herself and Tom Bankston, at the date of his death.

Tom Bankston died on November 22, 1946. He left securities worth in excess of $30,000/00. He had been employed at the State Prison at Huntsville. And he was in the first World War. The evidence produced by appellant was that while he was stationed at Camp Gordon, near Chamblee, Georgia, the marriage in question took place. Her testimony at the trial was to the effect: That at. the time she was about 16 years of age, and lived in DeKalb, Texas, a town of a thousand inhabitants. That she left'DeKalb in a Ford, which belonged to the deceased, on a Thursday or a Friday, and drove to Texarkana where she met Art Shaver, who was then about 29 years old and married, and was driven by him to Chamblee, Georgia, in order to marry Tom Bankston. That they did not arrive at Chamblee until Monday or Tuesday of the following week. That she and Shaver sometimes spent the night in the automobile, and sometimes in a farmer’s house. That she was married to Tom Bankston in the first week in April, 1918, by a Justice of the Peace, that'Tom Banks-ton obtained the marriage license, and she saw it. That the only witnesses present were Art Shaver and Dr. Beck, a Texas State Senator, who had been dead for some years prior to the trial. That she lived in Chamblee, a village of about 200 people, as Mrs. Tom Bankston for about two weeks.

The testimony of Art Shaver corroborated that of appellant in all material respects with respect to the trip and the marriage ceremony. If this testimony, and that of appellant, were uncontradicted, it would then become our duty to examine it more carefully and at greater length to determine whether or not their evidence compelled a verdict to the effect that the ceremonial marriage took place. But their evidence was not uncontradicted, and the issue of their credibility as against that of the witnesses produced by appellees was an issue before the jury. Also there were unusual circumstances.

W. J. Bankston, a witness for appellees, and a brother of the deceased, testified that he talked to appellant over long distance telephone from Huntsville, where Tom lived, and where he died, three days after Tom’s death, at which time he told appellant that he had not seen Tom’s will. That appellant then told him that she knew that there was no will because when she last saw Tom he wanted to make a will for her, but since they were not married, she would not let him do so; that she had known Tom for many years, and had been good friends all those years.

Mrs. W. J. Bankston testified for ap-pellees that on November 25, 1946 (three days after Tom’s death) she had talked from Dallas over long distance telephone to appellant, and that appellant told her that she was a good friend of the family. Said witness further testified that the first *293 time she ever saw Tom (the deceased) was about fifteen years before the trial, when Tom was working at the prison. In response to her question, Tom told her that he had never married because the only girl he ever asked had left him waiting at the doorsteps.

Both Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Bankston admitted that appellant told them when they saw her the next day that she had married Tom in Georgia in 1918. But at that time she stated that it was Dr. Beck who had driven her over to Ghamblee, and had obtained the marriage license.

Appellant herself admitted that when she came to Huntsville, the Saturday after Tom’s death, and met appellee Sadie Bailes, that she told said appellee she was “just a friend of the family.”

The evidence showed that appellant conducted a trucking business, a -cafe business, and dealt in real estate. That she had engaged in litigation, and that on many occasions she had sworn she was a feme sole, and that she so made out her income tax returns. That she and Tom had decided to keep their marriage secret because her brother-in-law, Durst, and her sister, the wife of the said Durst, did not approve of Tom. That the marriage was kept a secret from her father and mother, and all of her five sisters, but that her brother knew that she and Tom lived as man and wife in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Durst in DeKalb, Texas, for some months while the Dursts were absent in Oklahoma, but that they ceased to do so before the Dursts returned. They continued to keep the secret after the death of the Dursts.

The evidence showed that the parties had corresponded through the years, beginning when Tom was in the military service.

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216 S.W.2d 291, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 926, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bankston-v-scott-texapp-1948.