Brown v. Brown

256 S.W.2d 143, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 2223
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 30, 1953
Docket4805
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 256 S.W.2d 143 (Brown v. Brown) 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
Brown v. Brown, 256 S.W.2d 143, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 2223 (Tex. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

WALKER, Justice.

This suit was brought to recover the death benefits payable to the widow of a workman under the Workmen’s Compensation Law. George Brown was the workman. Merenda Brown, the plaintiff, and Margaret Brown, a defendant, each claim to be the widow of George Brown. George Brown, Merenda Brown and Margaret Brown were negroes. Merenda Brown’s claim is founded upon a common law marriage with George Brown which, she testified, was entered into in Louisiana in 1932. Merenda had married one Burnice Jones in 1918, and it was an issue on the trial of this cause whether this marriage with Burnice was void because of a prior marriage between Burnice and one. Pearl Sylvis. Margaret Brown’s claim is founded upon a ceremonial marriage (that is, one according to the statutes regulating marriage) between her and George Brown in Nacogdoches County on February 8, 1949. Margaret Brown is 16 years younger than Merenda Brown. The other defendant was the Insurer, namely, American Lloyds; and Insurer admitted liability *144 for the benefits, to whichever of the two claimants was found entitled thereto. ■

The cause was tried to a jury, who returned the following verdict in' response to special issues: (1) Burnice Jones was married to Pearl Sylvis when he married the plaintiff in April, 1918, in Marion County, Texas; (2) There was a common law marriage between George Brown and the plaintiff, Merenda Brown; and (3) George Brown did not divorce the plaintiff Merenda Brown before the ceremonial marriage with the defendant, Margaret Brown.

On this verdict the trial court rendered judgment in behalf of Merenda Brown for the benefits payable under the Act, less deductions which are not in issue here. Margaret Brown has appealed from this judgment and has assigned 13 Points of Error for reversal.

The order in which these points are, discussed differs from that in which appellant hás assigned them.

Opinion

Under Points 1, 8 and 9, appellant assigns-error to the-judgment on the ground that-.the proof did not show that the marriage between Burnice Jones and Merenda Brown had been dissolved; and this is also one of two grounds assigned in Points 6 and 7, which attack the finding under Issue 2 that George Brown and Merenda had made a common1 law marriage. The other, ground of Points 6 and 7 is discussed hereinafter. Under Issue 1 the jury found that Burnice Jones was married to Pearl Sylvis when he married the plaintiff Merenda Brown. Point 1 assigns error to the trial court’s action in overruling appellant’s motion' for instructed verdict and her mo-.' tion for judgment non obstante. Points 8 and 9 assign as error, that the finding under Issue 1 is not supported by the proof, as a matter of law or in fact. The relevant ground of Points 6 and 7 is that plaintiff had a living husband from the beginning of her relation with George Brown. The question we have to decide is whether there is any evidence to support the finding under Issue 1; for if Burnice Jones’ prior marriage to Pearl Sylvis had not been dissolved when Burnice Jones married Merenda Brown', the latter marriage was void and Merenda Brown was competent to marry George Brown.

The witness Pearl Jackson testified as follows: Her maiden name was Pearl Sylvis. She was raised “between Nabor-ton and Dorson, Louisiana, about nine miles out.” She knew Burnice Jones (who is .referred to throughout her testimony and in the official documents pertaining to her marriage as Burnish'Jones). “He and I gone to school together, play children together.”' They were raised together. She got married in September,'1916, to Burnice Jones, on September 3, 1916. She and Burnice Jones lived together “until November in 1917.” Then “he told me he was going to Oakdale and get him a job and go to work, after he sold the bale of cotton, and I never saw him until 1918 when the baby was 8 months old.”

She testified further"Q. Now, when Burnish saw you in August,. 1918, how did he addréss you? A. He said ‘Well, hello there, Plow is the wife and baby getting along? How have you all been' getting along?’ He picked up the baby and kissed him and gave him Half a dollar, and that is all he ever give him.” Burnice didn’t stay there. “He went to his' mother’s and father’s after he played with the baby around there and I saw him that evening on the church ground and I never saw him again until- the- baby was six years old.”

Pearl Jackson' and Burnice Jones were married in Louisiana on September 3, 1916, by a justice of the peace. Certified copies of the license issued by the Louisiana authority and of the return by the officiating justice are in proof. Both the license and the return are dated September 3, 1916. Pearl Jackson’s maiden name Pearl Sylvis is used in both documents. The license was issued in DeSoto Parish and the return states that it was made in that parish. It is stated in the certificates to these documents that these certificates were made in Mansfield, Louisiana. Pearl Jackson testified that Burnice Jones got the license at Mansfield, and that they were married by *145 a justice of the peace “between Naborton and Mansfield.”

She testified further that she had never filed a divorce suit against Burnice Jones. “Q. Did Burnish ever have you served with any divorce papers? A. No, sir, he never did. He never mentioned a divorce. Q. Did you ever receive any divorce papers? A. No, sir, I' did not.” .

A calculation from the testimony of Pearl Jackson shows that she had last seen Burnice in 1925; that was when the baby was six years old.' Walter Wright testified that he was a first cousin of Burnice Jones and that he last saw Burnice in 1935, (3 years after Merenda Brown’s common law marriage to George Brown) in Shreveport, Louisiana. Burnice then appeared to be in good health and all right. Burnice had come to see his mother, who seems to have been in witness’ home. Walter Wright testified further that he had not heard from Burnice Jones since. 1935 and had not talked to any member of Burnice’s family about Burnice since 1935. He did not know where Burnice was and “had not seen Burnish from about 1924 until 1935.” He and Burnice did not write. Pie had no reason to hear from Burnice except that the latter came to see his mother. The witness said that he and Burnice were raised together, but he did not know that Burnice and Pearl Sylvis had married. He had been told that Burnice had a child, but he had not seen the child.

The plaintiff Merenda Brown testified that she was born at Smithland, Texas, in Marion County, out in the country; on a farm. She was 54 years old when the .cause was tried and must, therefore, have been born in 1897 and was about 21 years old when she married Burnice Jones. She said that she was raised at Smithland and that she “got to the 6th grade” in school.

She testified that she married Burnice Jones on April 8, 1918. “I met him in 1918, in January.” They courted for about three months before they married. From this statement the jury could have concluded that she met Burnice Jones about January 8th, and this date was about two months after Burnice Jones had left Pearl Sylvis. After the marriage she and Burnice lived “at home, at Smithland.” Burnice “farmed the first year we married.” The second year he did public work. She lived with him “until 1920, in June.” Then “he went off to look for a job” and he had never returned. She had never seen Burnice Jones since that time.

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Bluebook (online)
256 S.W.2d 143, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 2223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-brown-texapp-1953.