Couch v. Schwalbe

111 S.W. 1046, 51 Tex. Civ. App. 94, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 165
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 27, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 111 S.W. 1046 (Couch v. Schwalbe) 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
Couch v. Schwalbe, 111 S.W. 1046, 51 Tex. Civ. App. 94, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 165 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

RICE, Associate Justice.

This suit was filed February 17, 1906, in the District Court of Crockett County, Texas, by Beulah B. Schwalbe against her former husband, S. E. Couch and their four children, Gilbert M. Couch, Euby May, Stephen E., Jr., and Paul 0. Couch, the last three of whom were minors, appellants herein, to recover an undivided half interest in certain real estate and personal property situated in said county, and for partition thereof. By agreement the venue of said case was changed to Tom Green County. A guardian ad litem was appointed for said minor children, and all of the defendants answered separately by general denial and by special pleas and statutes of limitation.

Trial was had before the court without a jury, and judgment rendered July 1, 1907, in favor of appellee, against all of the defendants, for an undivided two-fifths of the several tracts of land described in the petition, and judgment was rendered for • S. E. Couch, Sr., for three-fifths of said land, ordering partition between them, and adjudging that the other defendants owned no interest in said land, and that the deed under which they claimed was void. All of the defendants excepted and perfected their appeal, but the minor defendants alone have presented briefs herein.

While there are a number of assignments of error, it will only be necessary, in the view we take of this case, to pass upon the first, which urges that the court erred in holding that the deed from plaintiff, Beulah B. Schwalbe, to her said children, of date September 5, 1900, was void, and conveyed no title or interest to them in the lands described therein.

*96 It appears from the facts that S. E. Couch, Sr., and Beulah B. » Couch married in 1883; that the above-named children were the only-issue of said marriage; that they lived together until about June 15, 1900, when the said Beulah B. Couch, without cause or provocation on the part of her husband, voluntarily left their home with the fixed intention of permanently abandoning him; that at the time of said abandonment, and for some time prior thereto, she had been intimate with one Eli Schwalbe, and when she abandoned her husband did so for the purpose of continuing said criminal intimacy with said Schwalbe, which she did until they were married, some time after her divorce from appellant, S. E. Couch, Sr.; that during the marriage relation between S. E. Couch, Sr., and appellee, by their joint efforts, they had acquired certain real and personal property, aggregating in value, at the date of their divorce, about $33,255, and that the total indebtedness against it was $2.2,500, and that the property described in the judgment was community property at the date of said separation; that on September 5, 1900, appellee voluntarily executed a general warranty deed to her four children, appellants herein, conveying to them, upon consideration of love and affection, all of her property in Texas. This deed recites that it is by Beulah Couch, wife of S. E. Couch, and is signed and acknowledged by her, as provided by the statutes of Texas for married women, and it is admitted that the facts stated in the officer’s certificate are true. Appellant S. E. Couch, Sr., also signed said deed with appellee, and acknowledged it as required by law, but his name nowhere appeared as grantor therein nor anywhere in the body thereof. On the day of its execution the appellee, Beulah B. Schwalbe, in person, delivered the same to her son, Gilbert M. Couch, one of the grantees therein, who had the same, on September 14th thereafter, duly recorded. It was admitted that, at the time of the execution thereof, the separation between appellee and appellant S. E. Couch, Sr., was permanent, and so understood by them. After its execution appellee returned to Schwalbe and continued to live in adultery with him. Thereafter S. E. Couch, Sr., brought suit for divorce against appellee, and for custody of their said children. On October 12, 1900, judgment was entéred dissolving the marriage relation between them, and awarding the custody of the children to appellant S. E. Couch, Sr. The judgment of said court also confirmed the deed of conveyance by appellee to her said children, a copy of which was attached to the petition for divorce. .It was admitted that, since the execution of said deed, appellant S. E. Couch, Sr., had been continuously in possession of all of said land for himself and children, claiming an undivided one-half interest thereof, and paying taxes thereon in his own name for himself and said children. It was admitted that all of the property described in said deed was in existence at the date thereof, and that the same was community property acquired by. appellee and her husband, S. E. Couch, during their marriage. It was also admitted that no consideration, other than that expressed in the deed, which was love and affection, had passed therefor. It was likewise admitted that the personal property was of sufficient value to pay all community debts, and that the land described in the judgment was the only community property subject to partition.

*97 The appellants, after general and special demurrers, all of which were overruled, set up the facts as to the execution and delivery to them of the deed by their mother to the property sued for, the confirmation thereof by the District Court in the divorce proceedings between their father and mother, and also pleaded the statutes of two and four years’ limitation as against the vacation of said judgment and the statutes of three and five years’ limitation in bar of plaintiff’s right to recover said land.

Appellee contends that the deed was void for the want of authority and power in her to make the conveyance, and likewise urges that the same was void because, upon its face, it showed that she was the wife of S. E. Couch, and that he was not a grantor in said deed, nor did he intend to convey any of his right in said land, but the same was the attempted act of the wife to convey, not a particular tract, but the community interest in the lands described in said deed, and the husband did not join therein as grantor, and did not intend that any interest he might have should pass, but merely assented to the conveyance of her community interest in said land, the same being a deed of gift, without question of innocent purchaser or other question raising estoppel, so as to make the deed the act of the husband, depending alone for its efficacy upon the power of the wife to convey her community interest in said lands.

The question, therefore, for determination is, Whether or not the deed of a married woman conveying her entire community estate by deed of gift to her children, where the same is properly signed and acknowledged by her and her husband, but in which deed her husband’s name does not appear as grantor, is a valid and sufficient instrument in law to convey her interest in the community estate.

It seems to us that this question has been settled in this State against the view of appellee by the earlier decisions of the Supreme Court. In Thomas v. Chance, 11 Texas, 637, where the present statute declaring that community property may be disposed of by the husband only was first construed, it was contended that a deed by the wife alone was an absolute nullity, and conveyed no title. In that case the wife alone conveyed the property, the husband not joining in it, but it was shown by parol testimony that he consented and acquiesced, thereby authorizing it.

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Bluebook (online)
111 S.W. 1046, 51 Tex. Civ. App. 94, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/couch-v-schwalbe-texapp-1908.