Barbee v. Cubley

25 S.W.2d 689
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 16, 1930
DocketNo. 10461.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 25 S.W.2d 689 (Barbee v. Cubley) 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
Barbee v. Cubley, 25 S.W.2d 689 (Tex. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

VAUGHAN, J.

Appellees, Mrs. Jessie Cubley and K. A. Cubley, husband and wife, filed their original petition in the trial court on August 23, 192T, the party defendants named therein being Mrs. J. H. Barbee and husband, J. H. Barbee, and William Spillars, appellants, the Mercantile National Bank of Dallas, and Mr. Claude Westerfeld. On the 16th day of April, 1928, the appellees filed their fourth amended original petition, on , which this cause was tried, and in which their suit as to Mr. West-erfeld was dismissed.

For convenience, appellees will hereafter be designated as follows: Mrs. Jessie Cubley as appellee Jessie, and K. A. Cubley as appellee Cubley.

*690 In order to properly present the case, as made by appellees’ said amended petition, we find, it necessary to make the following extended statement therefrom: Appellees alleged that Mrs. M. L. Leonard, formerly Mrs. B. E. Thyng, died intestate in the city of Dallas on or about June 23, 1927, owning, seized, and possessing in fee simple, and being her own and individual estate, property consisting of approximately $62,000 in cash and $132,000 of high-class real estate, vendor’s lien notes, and other personal property, all of which was fully itemized in their petition; that ap-pellee Jessie was and is entitled to an undivided three-fourths interest in said estate; that appellants Blrs. J. H. (Lula) Barbee and William Spillars, the grandchildren of Mrs. M. L. Leonard, were and each are entitled to an undivided one-eighth thereof; that ap-pellee Jessie was born in Bay City, Blich., on the 4th day of July, 1882; and that, on or about January 20, 1888, her father being dead, her mother entered into and made a valid and legal contract of adoption with Blrs. M. L. Thyng (afterwards Blrs. M. L. Leonard), and her husband, B. P. Thyng, in substance, as follows:

It was alleged that Mrs. Mamie E. Partridge, the mother of appellee Jessie, did surrender her said child to them for adoption, and, by said contract of adoption, said B. P. Thyng and wife, Blrs. M. L. Thyng, agreed to and did adopt said child. Further allegations were made, viz.: “That the plaintiff’s mother and the said B. F. Thyng and wife, Mrs. M. L. Thyng, afterwards the said Blrs. M. L. Leonard, entered into said contract, by which it was agreed that the plaintiff’s mother would surrender her said child, the plaintiff, to them; that they would rear said child and legally adopt her as their own child, and leave said child all of their property, real and personal, at their deaths, and that at their deaths plaintiff herein, or their adopted child, should and would have all of their property; that plaintiff, Blrs. Jessie Cubley, was held out to the world by Mr. and Mrs. Thyng as their child, and was accorded the rights and privileges of one by them, and that Mr. and Mrs. Thyng always regarded her and considered her so to be, and that she in turn performed services and rendered the companionship of an adopted daughter; that said plaintiff continued to live with her adopted mother, Mrs. B. F. Thyng, as her adopted child, and continued to give her said adopted mother all respect, love and obedience as her own child after the death of heir said adopting father; that Mrs. B. F. Thyng, the widow, considered and treated the said Jessie as her own child, and had no intent or thought but that Jessie should and would have her share of all her estate as her adopted child; that the said Blrs. B. F. Thyng, afterwards Mrs. M. L. Leonard, did, after the death of her husband, B. F. Thyng, and as a single woman, thus ratify this said contract of adoption, and did expressly agree to carry out and did carry out the terms thereof, agreeing with plaintiff, Jessie, that she was her adopted daughter, as stipulated in said written contract of adop-, tion, and she did carry out and perform said written contract in. accordance with the terms and provisions thereof, and did in all things ratify and confirm the same after she became a widow, and thereby said written contract of adoption became as binding upon her as if made when she was a feme sole, and not under coverture; that said Mrs. B. F. Thyng did, after the death of her husband, B. F. Thyng, and as a single woman, ratify the said written contract of adoption and expressly agreed to carry out the terms thereof, agreeing with Jessie to leave her her share or part of all her property owned by her at her death; that never at any time was the relation of mother and child changed by Jessie and Mrs. B. F. Thyng; that plaintiff had for many years been taught and led to believe by Mrs. Thyng that the contract of adoption had been properly executed and filed with the County Clerk of Dallas County, Texas, for record, as required by law; that after diligent search said plaintiff discovered that said contract of adoption was never filed with the said County Clerk, had been misplaced or lost, and is not to be found with the papers and records of Mrs. M. L. Leonard, or elsewhere; that said written contract of adoption was duly made out and signed by BIr. and Mrs. B. F. Thyng and Blrs. Mamie E. Partridge, the widowed mother of the plaintiff, Jessie, and was duly acknowledged by all of them for record, as required by law, and was left in the custody of Blrs. B. F. Thyng to be filed and recorded, and was at the time of her death in her possession, or should have been in.her possession; that if said adoption contract was never filed for record by Mr. and Mrs. Thyng with the County Clerk of Dallas County, Texas, as required by law, it was not the fault of Jessie, nor her mother, nor anyone chargeable to her, all of whom relied upon the agreement and promise of Mr. and Mrs. Thyng to file same of record, and they and those claiming under them are estopped from denying the validity of said contract of adoption and the specific performance thereof.”

The date of the death of Mr.* B. F. Thyng was not alleged. The original prayer for relief was amended by trial amendment containing these words: “They (plaintiffs) do not seek or ask for a partition of the property in this suit, but reserve the right to partition the property in a subsequent suit”, so as to eliminate from the amended original petition the following, “Her share or interest in the property of said estate be adjudicated and established, and that the respective shares of the defendants, and each of them, be adjudicated and established.” The prayer was also specifically amended to read as follows, *691 “That the plaintiff, Jessie Cubley, be adjudged and decreed the adopted child and heir of Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Thyng, afterwards Mrs. M. L. Leonard, or in the alternative, that plaintiff be decreed a specific performance' of said contract of adoption, and for such other and further, general and special, relief as she may be entitled to in law and in equity.”

By trial amendment, appellees alleged that the contract referred to in the petition “recited and provided that plaintiff, Jessie Partridge, then a young child, was thereby adopted by them and should take of their estate at the death of both of them as their adopted child and heir, and it did further state and recite, and it was by them further agreed and contracted that, at their death, the child Jessie should, for the consideration of said past and future services take of their estates at their death one-half thereof.”

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Bluebook (online)
25 S.W.2d 689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barbee-v-cubley-texapp-1930.