Bennett v. Montgomery

22 S.W. 115, 3 Tex. Civ. App. 222, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 231
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 26, 1893
DocketNo. 160.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 22 S.W. 115 (Bennett v. Montgomery) 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
Bennett v. Montgomery, 22 S.W. 115, 3 Tex. Civ. App. 222, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 231 (Tex. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

FISHER, Chief Justice.

This was an action brought by defendant in error (plaintiff below) against plaintiff in error (defendant below) to establish a lost deed from Cora K. Rice to W. J. Montgomery and T. B. Wheeler for an undivided half of the headright certificate of Louis P. Cook, and to quiet his title to 6,917,270 varas of land located by virtue of said certificate. The cause was tried by the court without a jury, and resulted in a decree for the plaintiff establishing said deed, and quieting Montgomery’s title to the land in controversy. Defendant brings his case here by writ of error.

The court below found the facts as follows, which we adopt as the findings of fact by this court:

“ 1. That prior to 1860, Louis P. Cook and his wife died, leaving four children, one of whom was Cora K. Cook, who, in May, 1863, married G-. W. Bennett, and in November, same year, she gave birth to a child, who is the defendant in this suit.

“ 2. That sometime in 1865 said Cora K. abandoned her said husband and child, and never lived with or saw them thereafter up to the time of her death, which occurred in Austin, Texas, in August, 1873, said abandonment having taken place in Corpus Christi, Texas.

“ 3. That said G-. W. Bennett moved from Texas to the State of Kentucky in 1871, and carried defendant with him, and has lived there ever *224 since, and is now over fifty years of age; that he kept defendant until he was about grown.

“ 4. That from the time of said G-. W. Bennett’s marriage to said Cora up to the present time, he has never had possession of or exercised any control over any of the separate property belonging to said Cora, and never after their separation contributed anything to her support; in fact, he did not know where she was, she having become an abandoned woman, and led a life of shame.

“5. That the interest of said Cora in the property involved was the separate estate of said Cora; and plaintiff and defendant both claim under her, thus:

6. That on the 10th day of November, 1872, said Cora K. Bennett, representing and signing herself and name as Cora K. Rice, executed and acknowledged as a feme sole and delivered to T. B. Wheeler and plaintiff a warranty deed to her undivided one-fourth- of the land certificate described in plaintiff’s petition, which said deed was duly recorded in the counties of Parker, Palo Pinto, and.Refugio, and the said record in Parker has been destroyed and said original deed lost. On the back of this deed was a relinquishment by Horatio H. Rice of his interest in said certificate, dated December 27, 1872, which was also recorded same as deed, and is lost.

“ 7. That plaintiff is and was at beginning of suit the owner of all of said T. B. Wheeler’s interest in said land certificate and the land located by virtue thereof.

“ 8. That plaintiff and defendant both claim under said Cora K. Bennett, who, in dealing with plaintiff and said Wheeler, represented herself as and signed her name as Cora K. Rice; plaintiff under the conveyance from her to Wheeler and himself and conveyance (agreed to exist) from Wheeler to him; and defendant claims as only child and heir of said Cora K. Rice (Bennett).

“ 9. That at the time Wheeler and plaintiff negotiated the purchase of said Cora K.’s interest in said land certificate, and before they paid her therefor, she represented to them, that she was the wife of Horatio H. Rice, and that said H. H. Rice had abandoned her and refused to support her, and that she was in destitute circumstances and had to sell her interest in the certificate for her support; that said Wheeler and plaintiff believed said statements to be true, and relied upon them, and bought her one-fourth interest in said certificate, and paid her $280 for it, which was a fair market price for her interest therein. That said Wheeler and plaintiff, at the time of said purchase from said Cora K., knew nothing of her marriage with said G-. W. Bennett, and never heard of it until in 1887, though she was in fact married to him as herein before stated, and they were never divorced.

*225 “ 10. That said Cora K. was never married to said Horatio H. Rice, though she did live with him for a time ostensibly as his wife, and went by the name of Cora It. Rice.”

Upon the facts as found, the trial court held as matter of law: “ That by reason of this permanent separation of Cora K. Bennett from her said husband, G-. W. Bennett, she had authority to sell her said separate estate without being joined by her said husband, and that the conveyance executed by her to plaintiff and Wheeler passed title from her; and plaintiff having bought from Wheeler, is entitled to relief sought.”

It is contended by plaintiff in error, that the court below erred in rendering judgment in favor of defendant in error, because the facts do not show a case that would warrant the wife in acting in the disposition of her separate property independent of her husband.

It is clear from the facts, that at the time of execution of the deed, in 1872, by Cora Bennett to the defendant in error, she was married to G-. W. Bennett, who was living in Kentucky, and that she was living in Austin, Texas, as the reputed wife of another, and that she had wrongfully and permanently abandoned and separated from her husband in the year 1865, and that they had not lived together since that time. It is equally clear from the facts, that the deed was executed by Cora Bennett without her husband joining in the conveyance, and that the property so conveyed was her separate estate, and that since the separation he had exercised no control over her or her property.

Did these facts authorize the wife to deal with her separate property as a feme sole ?

In Clements v. Ewing, 71 Texas, 371, the appellees claimed under a conveyance from Mrs. Hicks, a married woman at the time of its execution. It appeared that Mrs. Hicks and her husband, J. J. Hicks, married in 1860, and about sixteen months thereafter Hicks entered the Confederate army and remained out of the State until his death, which occurred after the conveyance was executed. After the war, he never returned to Texas, but remained in Louisiana, where he married again, after obtaining a divorce from Mrs. Hicks, and subsequent to the execution of the conveyance.

It was held, that the long continued absence of the husband authorized Mrs. Hicks to dispose of her separate estate as a feme sole, and that the facts showed that the intention of Hicks was to permanently abandon his wife, and that in order for her to deal with her separate property as a feme sole it was not necessary that there should exist a necessity for the sale.

In Wright v. Blackwood & Frazier, 57 Texas, 647, the appellant, when a married woman, without being joined by her husband, executed a power *226 of attorney to one Stands, authorizing him to contract for necessary repairs of a house, her separate property.

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Bluebook (online)
22 S.W. 115, 3 Tex. Civ. App. 222, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-montgomery-texapp-1893.