Boudreaux v. Taylor

353 S.W.2d 901, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2166
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 11, 1962
Docket3920
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 353 S.W.2d 901 (Boudreaux v. Taylor) 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
Boudreaux v. Taylor, 353 S.W.2d 901, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2166 (Tex. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

WILSON, Justice.

Four sisters were declared illegitimate by the judgment appealed from, in which a take-nothing judgment was rendered against appellants. In our opinion the judgment is erroneous, and it is reversed.

Appellants are three of the daughters and the son of a deceased daughter of James Taylor and Cecilia Joseph whose Louisiana marriage the trial court concluded was void. Appellants were denied any interest in their father’s estate in this non-jury action against appellee, his fourth and surviving wife. Findings and conclusions were filed. The material facts, found or undisputed, are as follows:

April 17, 1896 James Melton Taylor obtained a Louisiana license to marry Stella B. Johnson, and on the same day executed a marriage bond required by Louisiana law. The return of the minister and the marriage certificate, however, show the marriage ceremony took place the previous day, April 16. We find no evidence to support the court’s finding that they were married April 10, 1896. November 6, 1896 Stella bore a child (who disclaims herein), and in 1897 James and Stella separated. The asserted impediment of this marriage is the basis on which the subsequent marriage of the parents of the four sisters was held void by the trial court.

In “the latter part of 1897”, according to Stella B. Johnson’s testimony, James Taylor and Cecilia Joseph drove to Stella’s home. “He stopped to speak to me and to introduce me to his future wife”, and Cecilia said, “I am the one that is going to marry your husband.”

March 21, 1898 a Louisiana license was issued authorizing the marriage of Taylor and Cecilia Joseph and a marriage bond was executed. The court finds a marriage ceremony was performed in Louisiana pursuant to this license. This public marriage ceremony was performed with attendants and bridesmaids in a church by a minister on the afternoon of March 23, 1898 in the same community in which the minister, bridesmaids, bride, groom and Stella Johnson resided. James and Cecilia immediately began living together and maintaining a home as husband and wife in that same community. From 1900 to 1909 seven daughters were born to them, three of whom died. The remaining four were declared by the judgment to be illegitimate. During all these years the record shows James, Cecilia and these children were continuously recognized as a family in the community. James and Cecilia continued to live in Louisiana, recognizing each other as husband and wife, rearing their family, recognizing and acknowledging their children as such, for about thirteen years. They separated in 1911, when James came *903 to Texas. The court found James commenced residence in Texas in 1909 or some time thereafter.

The court found further that the 1896 marriage of James Taylor and Stella Johnson continued until dissolved by a divorce decree December 18, 1909. The only evidence in the record of a decree of this date is a certified copy of a Louisiana judgment, with blank docket number, dissolving bonds of matrimony in a cause styled “- Taylor vs. Ellila Taylor.” There is nothing to identify James Taylor and Stella Johnson with this document, although Stella testified she was divorced from Taylor in 1909.

In 1925 James obtained a Texas divorce from Cecilia, alleging in the petition they were lawfully married in 1898. Cecilia continued to live in Louisiana until she died in 1930. James married defendant-appellee in Texas in 1931 and they resided in Texas until he died intestate in 1952.

The trial court concluded the status of the children of Cecilia, born while she cohabited with James Taylor, was governed by Louisiana law, and that rights of inheritance were governed by the law of Texas. No complaint is made of these conclusions. The general rules are variously summarized as being that legitimacy of the child is determined initially by the law of the place of birth, or where the parents (or one or the other of them) were domiciled. Madden, Persons and Personal Relations (1931) p. 347; Goodrich, Conflict of Laws (1937) 435; Story, Conflict of Laws, Sec. 87; Stumberg, Conflict of Laws (1951) p. 332; IV Vernier, American Family Laws (1936) Sec. 241, p. 150 et seq.; Beale, Conflict of Laws (1935) Vol. II, p. 704; Leflar, Conflict of Laws (1959) 344; Minor, Conflict of Laws, 215; American Law Inst. Restatement, Conflict of Laws, Sec. 137; 12 Tex.Jur.2d Sec. 5, p. 306; 15 C.J.S. Conflict of Laws § 14, p. 915; 11 Am.Jur. p. 316. We are not concerned, however, with a question of conflict of laws, since our disposition would be the same under either Louisiana or Texas law, the controlling principles being substantially the same in both.

In Texas the presumption of validity of a marriage duly shown to have been contracted “is one of the strongest, if, indeed, not the strongest, known to law. The presumption is, in itself, evidence, and may even outweigh positive evidence to the contrary. The strength of the presumption increases with the lapse of time, acknowledgments by the parties to the marriage, and birth of children; and the fact that the legitimacy of a child may be involved is a factor in sustaining the validity of the marriage”. Texas Employers’ Ins. Ass’n v. Elder, 155 Tex. 27, 282 S.W.2d 371, 373. In the Elder case it was held a stipulation that one spouse never obtained a divorce did not show the marriage was not dissolved in a suit by the other; and facts negativing annulment did not destroy a presumption of divorce. It was held that upon proof of subsequent marriage “the presumption itself supplied the evidence” that a prior marriage had been dissolved and the subsequent marriage was valid; the burden of proving the contrary being upon the party attacking its legality, and no burden resting on plaintiff to show the prior marriage was dissolved. The Supreme Court said, “Courts will gladly resort to any allowable presumption to avoid the holding that Ethel Mae and Elder were never married and that the mother of Dade’s children is not his wife.” A common-law marriage was there in question; here it is a formal public ceremonial marriage. There a living wife’s rights were at issue; here the children’s interests are involved, where both parents are deceased.

In Louisiana also “The presumption of marriage and legitimate filiation is one of the strongest known to the law, and in favor of a child asserting its legitimacy this presumption applies with peculiar force”, as its Supreme Court has frequently held. Cameron v. Rowland, 1945, 208 La. 663, 23 So.2d 283, 292 and cases cited. In Patterson v. Gaines, 6 How. 550, 47 U.S. 550, *904 12 L.Ed. 553, the Supreme Court, in a case where it was asserted the impediment of a prior marriage invalidated a subsequent marriage so as to make children of the latter illegitimate, summarized Louisiana law: “If the fact of marriage be proved, nothing can impugn the legitimacy of the issue, short of the proof of facts showing it to be impossible that the husband could be the father.”

When these presumptions are applied it is apparent the evidence in the present case will not support a determination the daughters of James and Cecilia were illegitimate.

There is another impelling reason these children are to be held legitimate. Art.

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353 S.W.2d 901, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boudreaux-v-taylor-texapp-1962.