Benavides v. Houston Ice & Brewing Ass'n

224 S.W. 385, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 893
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 21, 1920
DocketNo. 7907.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 224 S.W. 385 (Benavides v. Houston Ice & Brewing Ass'n) 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
Benavides v. Houston Ice & Brewing Ass'n, 224 S.W. 385, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 893 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

The judgment here appealed from was entered in a cause having its basis in the consolidation below of three separate suits in that same court between or among the parties to this litigation. Eirst there *386 was No. 34509, a suit for divorce and settlement of property rights brought by* Perfine Benavides against her husband, Joe Bena-vides, in which by the court’s permission the Houston Ice & Brewing Association intervened on October 12,1918, declaring that it held twenty-three unpaid, valid, and enforceable notes out of a series of 33 notes executed by Joe Benavides August 23, 1912, and payable to its predecessor in title thereto, upon which there was then a balance due of $6,839.62, that same had been given as part of the purchase price for and were secured by a deed of trust on lots 2, 3, the west half of 4, in block 395, and lot 14, in block 462, all in the city of Galveston, together with all improvements on any of them located, further setting up an additional indebtedness of $853.28 on open account against both Joe and Perfine Benavides, also claimed to be secured by the deed of trust mentioned, and praying for judgment for its aggregate debt of $7,692.90, together with foreclosure of the lien declared upon, against both the husband and wife. Decree in that proceeding followed on October 16, 1918, whereby Benavides and wife were divorced, property rights disposed of as between them, and intervener brewing association was given judgment against them both for the full amount it sued for, with like establishment and foreclosure of its lien upon the 2½ lots in block 395 only, lot 14, in block 462, not being referred to, it being further provided that no execution for the debt should issue over against Perfine Benavides, and that there should be a stay for 90 days of any execution, as well as of partition of community property between the divorced parties.

Next in sequence came cause No. 34825, filed January 21, 1919, by Perfine Benavides alone, as plaintiff, against Joe Benavides and the brewing association, as defendants, in which she ought to have the above-described decree in preceding suit No. 34509 set aside as not binding upon her, on the claim that she did not understand the English language; had only had attorneys to represent her in the' divorce feature of that proceeding ; did not know anything of or understand anything about the matters involved in the brewing association’s intervention therein, and that the 2½ lots in block 395 so foreclosed upon constituted at all times since its original purchase on July 23, 1912, and still did, the homestead of herself and family, that the debt so fastened upon it was neither valid nor a lien as against her rights in the property — a large part of it being barred by limitation — and that the decree lacked finality because no'disposition was made of lot 14, block 462, which she prayed be first sold in satisfaction of the claimed indebtedness, if any was, before recourse be had to the homestead property; demurrers presented by the brewing association to these "allegations were overruled by the court on March 3, 1918.

Thereafter, on April 15, 1919, the brewing association as plaintiff filed against Perfine Benavides, as defendant, the last of the three suits, that is No. 35025, in which it sought to enjoin her from further prosecuting her suit No. 34825 until the issue of whether or not she had understood the intervention proceedings in the first suit could be determined, charging that her allegations in No. 34825 that she did not understand were untrue and fraudulently made, and further averring that the judgment on its intervention in No. 34509 was in all respects a valid and still subsisting one. Following the presentment of an answering plea in abatement on the part of Perfine Benavides, wherein she averred that all issues last attempted to be raised by the brewing association were already pending between the same parties in cause No. 34825, and in the alternative prayed for a consolidation, the court formally merged Nos. 34825 and 35025, and, after amended pleadings in behalf of each of the three litigants had been filed, later proceeded to try and decide all three suits as one, reciting in its final judgment that such consolidation had been by agreement of all parties.

These amendments in the consolidated cause included an amplified reiteration by Perfine Benavides of the allegations of her original petition in No. 34825, above summarized, a joinder by Joe Benavides in such renewed claims on her part of homestead rights in the 2½ lots in block 395, invalidity of and two and four years’ limitation against the debt sued on by the brewing association, and failure of the original decree to dispose of lot 14, block 462, together with further plea in his behalf that he too had been without notice or knowledge of the filing of the intervention so formerly heard and determined; also, on the brewing association’s part, a reassertion against both Joe and Perfine Benavides of the debts and lien it had first declared upon in its intervention, now setting up, however, in lieu of its former claim of $S53.28 as due upon open account, that Joe Benavides had executed a note on which the balance unpaid amounted to that sum.

On final trial after such merger and making of issues, the court, at different stages during its progress by separate charges to that end, peremptorily directed the jury to find: First, that the judgment in original cause No. 34509 was void; second, that In-tervener Brewing Association was entitled to recover $7,823.37 against Joe Benavides, with 6 per cent, per annum interest from that date; that for $6,807.02 thereof it had a lien on the 2 ½ lots in block 395 against both Mr. and Mrs. Benavides, as of date August 23, *387 1912; and that Mrs. Benavides had not shown herself entitled to a divorce. Verdicts having been accordingly so returned, judgment pursuant thereto in all particulars followed; the court further ordering a foreclosure of this lien upon and a sale of the 2⅛ lots involved, with special provision, however, that no money recovery be had and no execution issue against Perfine Benavides, concluding with the usual recitation that execution might issue in favor of the court’s officers against each party to the suit for the costs by each respectively incurred.

Joe and Perfine Benavides, as husband and wife, jointly appeal, making common cause in this court by attacking the brewing association’s recovery below; no complaint being presented here against the trial court’s refusal to divorce them. In differing. forms through a number of assignments their chief contention is that their several pleas of homestead rights in the 2½ lots foreclosed on and of limitation' against the indebtedness recovered for should have prevailed, in whole or in part, and in behalf, respectively, of either the one or the other of them, according as from their different positions they separately presented such defenses.

The facts developed upon these issues may fairly, it is thought, be thus briefed:

On July 23, 1912, Benavides, who with his wife and children was then living in a house on Mechanic street, owned by him, but located on rented ground, bought by deed to himself, duly recorded the same date, from Robert Webber, for $2,250, the 2½ lots here involved, for the purpose of putting a building thereon to be used at the same time as a residence, grocery store, and saloon.

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Bluebook (online)
224 S.W. 385, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 893, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benavides-v-houston-ice-brewing-assn-texapp-1920.