Caruso v. Lucius

448 S.W.2d 711, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2501
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 3, 1969
Docket11713
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 448 S.W.2d 711 (Caruso v. Lucius) 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
Caruso v. Lucius, 448 S.W.2d 711, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2501 (Tex. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

PHILLIPS, Chief Justice.

This is a suit brought by the first wife, the Appellant, against the estate of her deceased husband and his adopted son, Appellee, for a partition of her undivided community interest in properties accumulated during the marriage. This claim is also for her share of the community estate accumulated during her husband’s putative marriage to a second wife.

Neither side has attacked the adoption proceedings pertaining to the Appellee nor his claim of heirship to his lawful portion of the estate.

Trial was to a jury which found in favor of Appellant; however, the court entered judgment that she take nothing by her suit. Consequently, she perfected her appeal to this Court.

We reverse and render judgment for Appellant.

I.

Appellant’s points of error one and two, briefed together, are the error of the court in granting Defendant’s (Appellee’s) motion to disregard the jury’s findings in response to special issue No. 2, since the jury’s findings in response thereto are supported by at least some evidence; in failing and refusing to grant Plaintiff’s (Appellant’s) motion for judgment on the jury’s verdict.

We sustain these points.

Appellant is asserting her claim, as the prior and legitimate wife of Pasquale Caruso, to her portion of the community property, which, under Texas law would be one-half of Pasquale Caruso’s one-half of the community property accumulated during his later, putative marriage to Arcelia Lucius Caruso. 1

The jury’s answer to Special Issue No. 1 was that the Appellant and Pasquale Caruso had been legally married on September 18, 1913 and the jury’s answers to Special Issues Nos. 4 and 5 were that at the time of Pasquale Caruso’s and Arcelia Lucius Caruso’s common law marriage of January 8, 1925, Arcelia Caruso did not know of the pre-existing marriage of Appellant and Pasquale Caruso.

Since Arcelia Lucius Caruso was innocent of knowledge of the pre-existing *713 marriage, she was not a meretricious spouse, but was a putative spouse, and entitled to one-half of the “community” properties acquired by herself and Pasquale Caruso during their marriage relationship. Appellant’s claims, therefore, were to one-half of Pasquale Caruso’s one-half of the properties in question, plus the net income from those properties since the date of Pasquale Caruso’s death on July 19, 1966.

Therefore, Appellant contends that as the widow of Pasquale Caruso, she would be entitled to a partition of her undivided one-fourth interest in the properties in question, plus one-fourth of the net income derived from those properties since the death of Pasquale Caruso on July 19, 1966.

The answers of the jury to the Special Issues would have entitled Appellant to entry of a judgment according to the request made by her in her Motion for Judgment; however, the trial court held that there was no evidence to support the jury’s finding in response to Special Issue No. 2, to the effect that her marriage to Pasquale Caruso had not been dissolved by divorce or annulment before the death of Pasquale Caruso. On that basis, the trial court entered judgment that the Appellant take nothing by her suit.

Pasquale Caruso was born on August 27, 1890 in Molochio, Italy. He and Carmelo Cristarella (one of Appellant’s witnesses), who was born March 10, 1899 in Molochio, Italy, became friends there. Pasquale Caruso was married to the Appellant in Molochio, Italy, on September 18, 1913. Cristarella knew both of them well and they were all close friends.

In 1914, Pasquale Caruso came to the United States, to live in Amsterdam, New York. That same year, the Appellant and Pasquale Caruso had a child, who died at birth. Pasquale Caruso moved from Amsterdam, New York to San Antonio, Texas around 1917, and in 1921, Carmelo Crist-arella moved from Molochio, Italy to San Antonio, Texas, where he renewed his friendship with Pasquale Caruso.

After 1921, Cristarella and Caruso saw each other almost every day. Caruso moved from San Antonio, Texas to Austin, Texas around 1929, with Arcelia Lucius Caruso, whom he introduced as his wife. They remained residents of Austin, Texas until Pasquale Caruso’s death on February 6, 1966. Except for a stay of around a month in Fort Worth, Texas and a visit to France for about a month, Caruso never stayed anywhere else for any significant time after his marriage to Appellant.

In 1930, at the age of eight, the Appellee had come to Austin to live with his aunt, Arcelia Lucius Caruso, and with Pasquale Caruso, and he was adopted by them on December 10, 1942.

Pasquale Caruso kept his prior marriage hidden from his second wife, Arcelia Caruso, at least until after they were married and from his adopted son, the Appellee, John Lucius. He acknowledged his existing marriage to Appellant, to his old friend, Carmelo Cristarella, many times. However, he attempted to keep this fact as undisclosed as possible, and in 1960 or 1961, he specifically refused to send the Appellant money, stating, “I can’t afford to send money to my wife, because I be incriminated.”

As has been mentioned, the trial court, at the urging of the Appellee, refused to give effect to the Appellant’s evidence showing that Appellant’s marriage to Pasquale Caruso had never been terminated, and specifically ignored the jury’s finding in response to Special Issue No. 2. This action of the trial court must be reversed because of three independent lines of evidence supporting the jury’s finding.

The evidence showed Pasquale Caruso’s admissions of the existing nature of his marriage to Appellant, in conversations with Appellant’s witness, Carmelo Crist-arella.

*714 “Q Did Mr. Caruso ever discuss anything with regard to Teresa Francesca Luci Caruso with you?
A Yes, several times. * * * in 1961 or — 60, here in Austin, Texas. My brother come.
Q And you and your brother were here in Austin ?
A Visited him in the hospital here, Brackenridge Hospital.
Q Who did you see there ?
A We see Caruso. He was sick in bed.
Q Was there any conversation there?
A Yes, sir.
Q What was the conversation?
A The conversation was my brother asked Caruso.
Q Please slow down, sir.
A My brother asked Caruso, his wife asked my brother, to send some money to help her because she was sick in the hospital.
% ifi * * * ifc
Q What was the response ?
A The response he say, ‘no.’ He refused to send the money.
Q Do you remember the words he used?
A Yes, I did. He say, ‘I can’t afford to send the money to my wife, because I be incriminated.’ ”

Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
448 S.W.2d 711, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caruso-v-lucius-texapp-1969.